EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY OF EXPORT-IMPORT BANK IN ORDER TO IMPROVE THE BALANCE OF PAYMENTS

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CIA-RDP70B00338R000200170119-7
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May 11, 2004
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119
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June 13, 1968
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June 13, 1968 Appravec~F ~~Ipgg O l 0fi6-BDftN? 338R000200170119-7 S 7225 ,;APPROPRIATIONS UNDER THE ,STATE TECHNICAL SERVICES ACT OF 1965 Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. r'resident, I ask unanimous consent that the Senate pro- ceed to the consideration of Calendar No. 1209. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The bill will be stated by title. The BILL CLERK. A bill-(S. 3245) to ex- tend for an additional 2 years the au- thorization of appropriations under the State Technical Services Act of 1965. - The PRESIDING OFFICER. The ques- 'tion is on agreeing to the request of the Senator from Montana. Without objec- tion, it is so ordered. The Senate proceeded to consider the bill (S. 3245) which had been reported from the Committee on Commerce, with an amendment, on page 1, line 6, after the word "following:", strike out "'; $7,- 000,000 for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1969; and such amounts as maybe necessary for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1970.' " and insert " `$7,000,000 for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1969; $10,000,- DOG for the fiscal year ending June 30, '1970; $10,000,000 for the"fiscal year end- ing June 30, 1971.' "; so as to make the bill read: 11 .5. 3245 Be it enacted;by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That section 10 of the State Technical Services Act of 1965 (15 U.S.C., 1360; 79 Stat. 682) is amended by striking the period at the end of subsection (a) and inserting the following: "$7,000,000 for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1969; $10,000,600 for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1970; $10,000,000 for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1971." The PRESIDING OFFICER. The ques- tion is on agreeing to the committee amendment. The amendment was agreed to. 1Vlr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the RECORD an excerpt from the report ,(No. 1231), explaining the purposes of the bill. There being no objection, the excerpt was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: PURPOSE OF THE LEGISLATION S. 3245 amends the State Technical Serv- ices Act of 1965 by extending the.period of authorization of appropriations an additional 2 years. The bill would authorize appropria- tions of $7 million for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1969, and such amounts as may be necessary for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1970. The bill would permit continuance of the matching grants program to the States in furtherance of the present cooperative effort to promote the wider diffusion and more effective application of the findings of science and technology throughout American commerce and industry. The technical-serv- ices program would continue to draw upon the resources of universities, nonprofit re- search organizations, and State and local agencies, in locally planned and administered technical services designed to place these findings usefully in the hands of local busi- nesses and enterprises. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The ques- tion is on the engrossment and third reading of the bill. The bill (S. 3245) was ordered to be engrossed for a third reading, read the third time, and passed. The title was amended, so as to read: one-half hour on each amendment, to "A bill to extend for an additional 3 be divided between the proponent of years the authorization of appropriations the amendment and the Senator from under the State Technical Services Act Maine [Mr. MusKIE] ; that the time on of 1965." the bill be limited to not to exceed 2 MESSAGE,MOM THE HOUSE- EN ED BILLS SIGNED A ,sage from the House of Repre- sen)/atives, By Mr. Hackney, one of its coon Sup; H.R. 4030. An act for the relief of Yong in Sager; i.R. 4370. An act for the relief of Sandy Kyxiacoula Georgopoulos and Anthony Geo gopoulos; H. 7042. An act for the relief of Dr. Jose Del 11'o; U.N. '7431. An not for the relief of Gilmer H.R. 12639: mitations on the Canal Zone poses; 1964 (78 Stat. 990), prov ing for an investi- gation and study to determine a site for the construction of a sea-leiree canal connect- ing the Atlantic and Pacific O`eans; H.R. 15591. An act, for the ellef of Pfc. John Patrick Collopy, US516151 N H.R. 15972. An act to permit black and white or color reproductions of United States and foreign postage stamps under certain circumstances, and for other -purposes, . and H.R. 16489. An act making appropriations for the Treasury and Post Office Departments, the Executive Office of the President, and. certain independent agencies, for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1969, and for other purposes. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY OF EXPORT - IMPORT BANK IN ORDER TO IMPROVE THE BAL- ANCE OF PAYMENTS Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the Senate proceed to the consideration of Calendar No. 1082, S. 3218. I do this so that the bill may be the pending business on Monday next. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The bill will be stated by title. The ASSISTANT LEGISLATIVE CLERK. A bill (S. 3218) to enable the Export- Import Bank of the United States to approve extension of certain loans, guarantees, and insurance in connection with exports from the United States in order to improve the balance of pay- ments and foster the long-term com- mercial interests of the United States. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection to the request of the Sena- tor from Montana? There being no objection, the Senate proceeded to consider the bill. hours, to be divided and controlled by the Senator from Maine [Mr. MUSKIE] and the minority leader C'Mr. DIRKSEN], in accordance with the usual form. The unanimous-consent agreement reduced to writing ,is as follows:) Ordered, That, effecti on Monday, June- 17, 1968, at the conclusion routine morn- ing business, during the further considera- tion of the bill (S. 3218) td, enable the Export-Import Bank of the UnWd States to approve extension of certain lo$ns, guar- antees, and insurance in connection with exports from the United States in order to improve the balance of payments and foster the long-term commercial interests of the United States, debate on any amendment, motion, or appeal, except a motion to lay on the table, shall be limited to not to exceed one-half hour, to be equally divided and controlled by the mover of any such amend- ment or motion and the majority leader: Provided, That in the event the majority leader is in favor of any such amendment or motion, the time in opposition thereto shall be controlled by the minority leader or some Senator designated by him: Pro- vided further, That no amendment that is not germane to the provisions of the said bill shall be received. Ordered further, That on the question of the final passage of the said bill debate shall be limited to not to exceed two hours, to be equally divided and controlled, respectively, by the Senator from Maine [Mr. Mussls] and the minority leader: Provided, That the said leaders, or either of them, may, from 'the time under their control on the passage of the said bill, allot additional time to any Senator during the consideration of any amendment, motion, or appeal. Mr. MAGNUSON. Mr. President, in a recent article in the New Yorker maga- zine, tracing the history of gun control legislation in Congress, a Senate advo- cate of Strong gun control legislation was quoted as saying, "As things now stand, I can't. see how any Western Senator could possibly support the bill." And, sal the author, "None of them has." . % Yesterday,\Mr. President, I became a cosponsor of the administration's gun control bill, iiitroduced by the senior Senator from Connecticut [Mr. DODD]. That bill would`Vxtend to rifles, shotguns, and ammunition the restrictions which we recently appr ved on the sale of hand- guns. It would eliminate direct mail order sales and sales to non-residents and ju- veniles under 18. In addition, I am prepared to support effective measures to require the registra- tion and licensing of all firearms, by State and local action if possible, by Fed- eral action if necessary. Last night, I had a call from a good friend, the editor of a Washington State sportsman's, publication-a publication UNANIMOUS-CONSENT AGREEMENT trol atlon. "You have turned your Mr. MANSFIELD) .Tyr Bx 4 --i ac on us," he said, "You have ask unanimous consent that at the con- changed." "Yes," I said, "I have changed clusion of routine morning business on some'of my views." "Well, then," he said, Monday, June 17, 1968, debate On the "we are going to have to oppose your re- pending bill be limited to not to exceed election in November." S 7226 Approved For Relea 1 j13 -ff&003WRQ Q0170119-7 June 13, 1968 I said I was sorry about that. We had seen eye to eye on so many issues over the years. We had fought together many good fights for the conservation of our fish and wildlife resources, to preserve Washington as one of the few remaining natural paradises for hunters and fisher- men. But, of course, it was his privilege to endorse or to,condemn any candidate he He asked me what had brought me to this decision. And, although he was deeply disturbed, he had the courtesy to hear me out. And today, I would like to tell you, as I told him, why I have made this decision. I know of no one whose conscience has not been deeply troubled by the violence and terror surging through the streets of every city and every State. Not just last week, not just last month-but a steadily evolving pattern of disorder has made It seem as If the voice of sanity and of civil order in our country have been drowned out by the sound of gunfire in the streets. I am not talking primarily about the terrible decimation of some of our finest leaders. I am talking about the brutal, sudden death that each day, each hour greets ordinary citizens and their fam- ilies--a high school student standing on a street corner; two young marines stopping for a cup of coffee after an eve- ning with their girl friends; a young wife hurrying home having stayed out later than she had planned to finish the family shopping. Yes, I am thinking of President Ken- nedy and Senator Kennedy, Martin Luther King, Jr., and Medgar Evers. But I am also thinking of the 16 dead and the 31 wounded boys and girls, and pas- sers-by, struck down by a deranged stu- dent firing from the tower of the Univer- sity of Texas-and all of these were felled by rifle or shotgun fire. In 1966, there was a major gun crime committed every 5 minutes. Of course, no gun law-even a law stringent beyond the bounds of constitu- tionality-could eradicate assassinations, murder, robbery, assault. But a sound gun control law is one sane and rational measure which can be of great help in restoring the balance which now finds the rate of gun murders In this country 25 times that of Germany, 55 times that of Great Britain, and 90 times the rate for the Netherlands. There is another balance at stake. For what we are really asked to do by the opponents of gun control legislation Is to balance the reasonable fear of wives and children against the convenience of the hunter. For the talk of a dark plot to confiscate the guns of law-abiding hunters and sportsmen is nonsense. Is J. Edgar Hoover, an outspoken and fervent advo- cate of strong gun laws, any less a de- fender of liberty than the most patriotic rifleman in the country? No, what we are asking owners of fire- arms to do is no more than they now do uncomplainingly with their automobiles, their children's bicycles, even their dogs. I often go duck hunting with a good friend who has two shotguns and two good hunting dogs. His dogs are licensed -his guns are not. Is his liberty in- fringed if he must do for a lethal weap- on what he now must do for his dogs? He will also have to buy his weapons from a licensed dealer in his State-a dealer who will be able to see that he is a grown man, a law-abiding citizen of his community, and not an escaped con- vict or a deranged teenager. Of course, there are legitimate and necessary reasons for law-abiding citi- zens to possess guns. This legislation will protect such citizens, just as the car own- er is protected through registration against misappropriation or theft. This legislation will not disarm any- one with a right to a gun. It will make it just a little bit more difficult for the young or the Insane to lay their hands on a lethal weapon upon receiving their first impulse to commit mayhem. It will enable police officials with somewhat greater efficiency to trace murder weap- ons. It should prevent the petty criminal, if not the organized gangster, who cannot buy a gun over the counter from a li- censed dealer, from buying one by mail. And it might stop the adolescent with a sudden urge to feel like a man by having some fun with a gun. In Dallas, Tex., where guns are freely obtainable by anyone, the percentage of homicides committed by gun in 1963 was 72 percent; while in New York, which we think of as a center of crime, the Sullivan law, one of the strongest local gun laws, has kept the rate of murder by gun at 25 percent. Among the country's 10 largest cities, New York had the fifth lowest as- sault rate, the third lowest murder rate, and the lowest robbery rate. Perhaps, more important, the New York law makes it possible for police officials to make arrests for the illegal possession of pistols and revolvers before those weap- ons can be used. Again, as J. Edgar Hoover has said : Those who claim that the availability of firearms is not a factor in murders in this country are not facing reality. Is it not time we gave this basic sup- port to our law enforcement officers? I have pledged to the Senate that when the gun legislation is referred to the Commerce Committee, I will do all with- in my power to see that legislation is re- ported out without delay. And I will also do all that I can to see that that legisla- tion while reasonable and practical is fully adequate to the need. I know what tomorrow's mail will bring. I am ready for the angry and in- temperate letters, many of them from old friends and colleagues-from many I have hunted with, from men who have long thought of me, as I have, as one of them. But for me, this has become a mat- ter of deep conscience. The inconvenience will be so insig- nificant; the contribution to the law and order of our society, so great. I speak of the proposed ABM system. The ostensible purpose of the proposed Sentinel ABM system, as it is now called, would be to construct a defense against a possible Chinese ICBM attack. The total cost for the development, construc- tion and deployment of this so-called thin system is estimated to be from $5 to $7 billion, although its final- costs would most certainly be much higher. The request for fiscal year 1969 totals $1,195.6 million. This amount is con- tained in two bills: S. 3293, the military procurement research and development bill, and H.R. 16703, the military con- struction bill, and I understand that the AEC bill contains $324,500,000 for Sentinel warhead research. I ask unanimous consent that a table showing the amounts contained in these bills for the ABM system be printed in the RECORD at the conclusion of my re- marks. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. (See exhibit 1.) Mr. COOPER. Mr. President, I have been informed today that the Commit- tee on Appropriations has approved and will report to the Senate a bill in which funds will be recommended for appropri- ation to commence the deployment of the Sentinel ABM system., for site ac- quisition and construction, in the amount of $227,300,000. The controversy pro and con about the merits of this system has raged for several years. Several committees in the Senate have studied the issue thoroughly. The Armed Services Committee, the Joint Atomic Energy Committee, and the For- eign Relations Committee, subcommittee under the able leadership of the Senator from Tennessee [Mr. GORE], have con- ducted detailed hearings, both public and executive. The hearings before these committees have produced a very useful record, In addition, Congress, has had the benefit of the testimony of former Secretary of Defense McNamara on sev- eral occasions, and there has been much discussion in newspapers, magazines, and scientific journals, particularly during the past 6 months. I ask unanimous consent to have printed at the conclusion of my remarks one of the useful and informative articles that has been recently published in the March issue of Scientific American; the testimony of former Secretary of Defense McNamara before the Committee on Armed Services, in the early part of this year; and an annotated bibliography of the most important works discussing the ABM system, which has been prepared by the Library of Congress. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. (See exhibit 2.) -Mr. COOPER. But there is still a ne- cessity to have a full public debate of the ABM issue on the floor of the Senate. I recall that several years ago, when ap- propriations were recommended-I be- Mr. COOPER. Mr. President, I rise to- lieve it was for the Nike X system-the day to bring before the Senate an issue Senator from South Carolina invoked the whose costs and consequences for our rule to close the door, and there was a defense and security and for our foreign very full and informative debate on that policy are of the greatest importance, issue. ;'?tine .13, 1968 Approved E A/X05 < i%*RDQE? QQ'!38R000200170119-7 S 7227 ix April, when the military procure- The next important development in de- provide a defense against a possible Chi- mfent appropriation bill -was before the Tense effectiveness came with the introduc- nese attack. It-is argued that we should Senate, a bill which included for certain tion of "area defense" in the period 1964-65. be prepared to spend whatever money is phases of the ABM system, a unanimous- I would like to define the term "area de- phases required to gain the additional measure consent agreement was obtained which The detection sensor is the perimeter ac- of security that might be supplied by such a defense. limited debate 'on an amendment to 1 quisition radar (PAR) which detects ballistic If it can be demonstrated that this de- hour. As a result, the debate on this most missiles at long ranges. The PAR radar important venture the ABM was limited tracks the incoming missile and predicts its fense system is necessary for the secu- .......,...,.,, m,. , +o a , tha inenrnino mis- ritv of the United States. I would be cer- This limitation prevented the full dis- cussion of the issues that was required and many desired. But I believe the ABM issue is of such importance-its purposes and, its consequences-that we should have a`full debate in the Senate upon it. We should first consider the feasibility, necessity, and the consequences of con- structing an ABM system, before approv- ing appropriations which would lead step by step to its installation. Mr. President, my interest in this sub- ject was stimulated several years ago when we had the important debate on the Nike X behind closed doors, and later by hearings that were held in the Commit- tee on Foreign Relations by the able Sen- ator from Tennessee [Mr. GORE]. Since that time, I have read the testimonies and the statements by former Secretary of Defense McNamara and other admin- istration officials, and I have read, as much as possible, on the subject. I do not claim to be a technical expert, and such judgments as I have made have been based upon my own reading and the re- sults of discussion with others concerned with the issue. The ABM issue is not a new one. Two previous ABM systems, the Nike-Zeus and Nike X, planned by the United States, were never deployed because it was judged by the administration and Congress at the time-and history has proven that these judgments were cor- rect-that if such systems were built, they would have been obsolete before completion and therefore obviously not worth the cost. In 1959, President Ei- senhower, for example, stopped the Nike-Zeus deployment on grounds very similar to those that now apply to the Sentinel system. Although these systems were not built, technological develop- ment and research for ABM systems have continued and the state of the art has progressed. I shall not go into great detail this afternoon to describe the Sentinel sys- tem, but I should like to place in the RECORD a very helpful description of the system which was provided by Dr. John S. Foster, Jr., Director of Defense Re- search and Engineering, which he testi- fled last year before the Committee on Foreign Relations., on Monday, February I ask unanimous consent that his statement be printed in the RECORD at the conclusion of my. remarks. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. (See exhibit $.) Mr. COOPER. I know that Dr. Foster has made other more detailed statements, and he has testified several times and at length before the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on Appro- priations. This is a simple statement ex- rplaining the system. I shall read just a few paragraphs:, rile, we employ the Spartan missile which is a long-range interceptor developed from the old Nike-Zeus. Once the PAR radar has pre- dicted the future path of the missile a Spartan missile is fired so as to intercept it. This interceptor intercepts the incoming missile well above the atmosphere. Because of its long range the Spartan can intercept incoming missiles directed at targets several hundred miles from the Spartan battery lo- cation. The Spartan missile is guided by a missile site radar (MSR) which is associated with each battery. With the introduction of Spartan, the Zeus interceptor was no longer required-in effect, the Spartan replaced the Zeus. Comparatively few Spartan batteries. can defend the whole United States from simple attacks. You will note I said "simple attacks." It is still possible for a sophisticated opponent to confuse the defense and make the firepower demands on Spartan too high. In this case, terminal defense Sprints must be relied upon if we are to furnish a defense. The Spartan thus functions in two ways. It can provide a very effective defense over extended areas against simple threats. Against not so simple threats, it provides a defense in depth and is complementary to Sprint. In any case it forces the enemy, if he wishes to penetrate, to pay the price demanded by a sophisticated penetration aids program. You will note that I have described a flexi- ble set of building blocks consisting of PAR and MSR radars and two types of interceptor missiles, Spartan and Sprint. We also have a very large, sophisticated radar called TACMAR, designed specifically against sophisticated attacks. They can be put to- gether in various ways to provide varying levels of defense against different threats. For example, if we wished to defend the United States against a large Soviet attack, we would provide an overlay of an area de- fense such as I have described. As I men- tioned earlier, however, it would be necessary to depend primarily on terminal Sprint de- fense, including TACMARs, at selected cities. A selected city defense (including the area component) would cost about $10 or $20 bil- lion depending on the number of cities de- fended. As a matter of technical judgment, I be- lieve that these larger deployments carry with them technical risks. The likelihood of large and sophisticated attacks with the deploy- ment of significant U.S. defenses increases the technical uncertainty of the defensive sys- tem. Even with an ABM deployment we would have to expect that in an all-out ex- change, dozens of their warheads would likely explode in our cities. Mr. President, although untested and unproven as a complete system-and I know that the various components: the two radars PAR, and MSR, and the two missiles Spartan and Sprint have not been tested as a coordinated fully de- veloped system and cannot be fully tested because of the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty-and even though some compo- nents have yet to be translated from theory to practical operation, the imme- diate production of its elements and the deployment of the Sentinel ABM system have been urged by its proponents as necessary because, in theory, it would taln that every one of us wouiu ue wall- ing to vote for any sum of money that would provide that security. However, I would hope that this matter would be fully and fairly debated before we go fur- ther with the provision of funds for the deployment of a Sentinel system. I con- tend that we have not reached the point where we have the available information which would prove with any reasonable assurance that such a system is neces- sary or that it would provide any addi- tional security to our country than is available now through nuclear deter- rence. The assertion that the Sentinel ABM system would strengthen our defenses is not at all certain. Nor do the facts make it clear that there is a need to deploy the Sentinel system now or that deployment now,or in the future would enhance our security in the period between 1972-75 as is claimed. First, let us examine the "threat" against which the Sentinel ABM system is designed-the threat of Communist China. The Chinese have not yet successfully fired. or deployed an ICBM. It is believed that they have exploded about seven nu- clear devices. It is known they are en- gaged in surface-to-surface firing. How- ever, there is no evidence they have been able to fire or deploy an intercontinental ballistic missile. A year ago it was thought that an ICBM would be fired in late 1967 or 1968, and would be in production by 1971 or 1972. The cultural revolution has caused such turmoil within China that it is apparent that the original estimate of successful firing and production had to be extended. It is still estimated that Communist China has the capability of producing a number of ICBM's by the mid-1970's. If the present plans of the adminis- tration-the immediate deployment of the Sentinel ABM system-should pro- ceed according to schedule, supported by the appropriations recommended and to be provided by the bills I have noted, it is estimated that the ABM system could be installed in our country by 1974. Comparing the capabilities of China to successfully fire and develop an effec- tive ICBM system with the capability of the United States to install a thin sys- tem if it should be determined necessary, I can see no reason for the Congress to approve this year the deployment of an ABM system and start on the road to larger systems, with all the unfortunate consequences such action can entail. I know that in the testimony of former Secretary McNamara before the Com- mittee on Armed Services this year- which I referred to earlier-he did say that our intelligence would indicate that the Chinese had this capability. However, Approved For Release' 2004/05/12 : CIA=RDP70B00338R000200170119-7 S7228 Approved For Rele P70 00338R000200170119-7 A MR - SENATE June 13, 1968 at other points in his testimony, he con- cluded that the missiles would be, primi- tive and inaccurate, and by 1975 they would not be able to produce a large number of these missile,>. We must ask as reasonable persons if it is likely that Comr Vnist China, would as- sure its own,destruction. ?y a nuclear at- tack on the United States-armed. with a vast array of nuclear weapons. Some advocates assert that the Soviets are building an ABM system and that we must begin the construction of an ABM system to match or surpass their,efforts. Is the reason compelling some to urge the deployment of the Sentinel ABM system that it could be a "building block" lead- ing toward the development of an ex- tensive and heavier 413M system to defend the United States against an at- tack by the Soviet Union? ,Will it be argued that the deployment of a "thin" ABM system against attack from China would itself provide some measure of protection against a possible Soviet nuclear attack and even greater assurance of American nuclear superior- ity in the event of a Soviet attack? These arguments can be challenged. Both the United States and the Soviet Union have the nuclear capability many -times over to destroy each other and we have been assured again and again; by our Secretary of Defense and our military authorities that the United States has the capability to destroy the Soviet, Union even after' a first strike by the Soviet Union. Former Secretary McNamara has termed this the "assured destruction capability of the United States," and that assuming a first strike on the United States, that our own weapons systems have that element of "survivability," which is the term he has used to express the view that we would have the nuclear systems inviolate requirei,to strike back and destroy the Soviet Union. this testimony, which I shall, place in the RECORD, provides the number of missiles which the United States pos- sesses and' the ettlmate, of the Soviet missile strength. 'There are additional tables that show the consequences of a first strike by the Soviet_Unionupon the United States, and of our response upon the Soviet Union. These tables include an estimate of the damage that ,would be inflicted, the loss of life, and produc- tive capacity. These tables, and the tes- timony of Secretary McNamara, argue that either the attainment of nuclear parity by the Soviet Union, which I be- lieve to be unlikely, or the installation of ABM systems here in the United States directed at the Soviet Union, would not alter the capability of either, country to destroy each other. That caparbility, of course, is the deterrent. We have be- lieved, thus far, that if there were any intention on the part of either to strike at each other,, the deterrent or what has been called the balance of terror, has prevented any possible intentions, from being carried out. As I' shall note later, the installation of the ABM systems could upset this de- terrent. fistead of achieving greater security for the United States, it could lead to greater danger. If the Soviets achieve parity with the United States, which is unlikely, the assured ability to destroy each other remains. An ABM de- fense system-"thin" or "heavy"-de- signed for protection against the Soviet Union would not alter this ability to completely destroy each other. It would, in fact, only accelerate the arms race. More, offensive missiles or more defensive missiles would lead only to a multiplica- tion of the destruction capabilities of the United States and the Soviet Union. There does not seem to be any good rea- son to add more destructive power to the existing ability to destroy each other and, for all practical purposes, all civilized life. We know that the Soviets have built a primitive ABM system near Leningrad. Intelligence indicates that the Tallin sys- tem is an antiaircraft system for use against high-flying bombers and recon- naissance aircraft. According to recent intelligence estimates-this, again, is a statement by Secretary McNamara- construction of the so-called galosh sys- tem surrounding Moscow which was be- gun in 1960 has not been completed and is not being pursued according to sched- ule. It has not been extended to other cities in the Soviet Union. Of course, we do not know whether the Soviets are re- considering its usefulness or considering more fruitful negotiations with the United States to limit the deployment of ABM systems. In my view, the balance sheet comes down to the following: First. There Is no present threat to American security from a Chinese ICBM attack. According to the consensus of the intelligence community, the Chinese will not have a capability to launch an ICBM attack until the mid-1970's, and reckless as some consider the Communist Chi- nese to be, it is difficult to believe that they would Invite the certain destruction of their country by a nuclear attack upon the United States. Second. The destructive capabilities of the United States and the Soviet Union will not be altered by a thin or heavy ABM system. Third. Our surveillance and intelli- gence capabilities are of such magnitude and quality that the United states has the capability of providing information of new situations in China or the Soviet Union which would require greater effort to develop and deploy additional offen- sive or defensive weapons. Fourth. When the proposed Sentinel ABM system's technical characteristics are examined, one must conclude that the planned system would not provide the assurance of protection to justify its cost. The history of progress in missile technology is that offensive technology will always outdistance defensive efforts. Had Nike-Zeus been deployed, for ex- ample, it would have been obsolete before completion. The Sentinel system now planned for deployment may become quickly obsolete. It is not designed to defend. against MIRV-missile with mul- tiple warheads and Independently tar- geted-which the. United States, and we can assume the Soviets, are developing, Qr whether they are. reconsidering its usefulness. Again, as pointed in the testimony of both Dr. Foster and Secretary Ike- Namara, the value and effectiveness of the ABM system is diminished as the number of objects coming in is increased. Assuming that the Soviet Union or, some time in the future, the Communist Chinese could develop a MIRV system with a number of missiles which can be released and independently find their targets, this thin system would have little value. Fifth. The Sentinel cannot be fully tested as it complete system. That is not to say, however, that research and de- velopment, including the building of pro- totypes, will not go forward, for the amendments I will propose would not strike from the bills funds for continued research and development. The advance- ment of the state of the art will not be restricted. It would be perfected, and available, if the Congress should deter- mine on better evidence than is now available that an ABM system is feasible and necessary for the security of the United States. It has been effectively argued on the Senate floor that some of the elements have not yet been thoroughly tested or in some cases even built. The technical re- liability of all its components is not yet known. Certainly, extension of research for another year would give an oppor- tunity for perfection of the art. Finally, I come to another matter which I. think is very important: Sixth. Since the Glassboro Conference in May 1967 when the President and Sec- retary McNamara informed Premier Ko- sygin that the U.S. Government desired to work with the Soviet Union to limit mutually the development of strategic nuclear weapons, including AI:3M systems, efforts to work out an agreement with the Soviets have continued. The Vietnam war-and other factors-have stood in the way of a favorable conclusion, but our effort to halt the nuclear arms race should continue as long as there is any possibility of bringing about a, limitation. I believe that a decision by the Congress to begin the deployment of the thin sys- tem would only make agreement more difficult. I should like to quote from President Johnson's address to the United Nations General Assembly yesterday, on the occa- sion of the nuclear proliferation pact ceremony. He said in part: We desire---yes, we urgently desire--to be- gin early discussion on the limitation of strategic offensive and defensive weapons sys- tems. We shall search for an agreement that will not only avoid another costly and futile escalation of the arms race, but will de- escalate it. I believe that this treaty can lead to fur- ther measures that will inhibit the senseless continuation of the arms race. I believe that it can give the world time-very precious time-- to protect itself against Armageddon. It has been noted by Secretary Mc- Namara, and our intelligence, that the Soviet Union is not proceeding with dis- patch to complete installation of an ABM system around Moscow, and that it has not extended it to any other city. If we now begin to deploy an antiballistic mis- Approved For Release 2004/05/12 CIA-RDP70B00338R000200170119-7 Approved For Release 2004/05/12 CIA-RDP70BO0338R000200170119-7 Tune 13, 1968 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE sale system, in the light of past behavior. thbn, the Soviet Union will respond, and we will respond to their response, and we will have entered again a new phase of the nuclear arms race. In the light of these conclusions, it is my intention to introduce amendments to the military procurement appropria- tions bill, and H.R. 16703, the military construction bill, to strike from these bills funds to be used for the deployment of the ABM system. My amendment would not, and I repeat, would not, strike funds for continuing research and development upon such systems. The United States cannot afford at this time to spend money on a system cost- ing $5 to $7 billion, which may be ex- tended to a heavier system costing $40 billion or more, unless it is essential to our security. We have found it necessary to commit ourselves to an expenditure re- duction of $6 billion. We believe it neces- sary to raise the taxes of our people and we have found it necessary to cut needed and essential domestic programs. In view of our difficulties, and in view of our priorities, I do not believe the deploy- ment of the Sentinel can be justified at the present time. There are other questions concerning the proposed Sentinel ABM system that should be addressed by the Congress and the people of this country. We must ask the question. If we build the ABM, what response will this bring from the So- viet Union-the only great nuclear pow- er other than the United States? In the light of past experience, there will be a radical response-an escalation of the nuclear arms race-offensive and de- fensive. We must ask, How much of our national energy will be devoted to meet- ing the actions and counteractions pro- duced by our decisions to go ahead with such a system? Will such a system con- tribute to strengthening the security of our country, or will it increase the danger of a nuclear catastrophe? I do not believe that the deployment of an ABM system at this time is in our country's best interests. I do not believe it offers any advantage to the United States, military, political or moral. My discussion today is not detailed: I have wanted to present some issues for the Senate's consideration, discussion, and debate, and, hopefully, to raise questions which can be discussed later and should be discussed thoroughly when the first bill on that subject comes before the Senate, providing for funds to be used in the deployment of that system. It is my intention to further elaborate these issues and others when the bills are be- fore the Senate for action. We have hopefully learned a hard les- son from Vietnam. We did not rigorously consider the implications of our increas- ing involvement in Vietnam when it might have been possible to extricate our- selves with relatively small loss and at a time and In such a way that might have furthered the opportunity for self-de- termination and peace in South Vietnam. We dare not fail to look at the implica- tions of the deployment of the ABM and to ask, if taken, whether it would lead to more dangerous involvements and con- sequences. EXHIBIT 1 MISSILE DEFENSE FUNDING LEGISLATION-FISCAL YEAR 1969 DEFENSE APPROPRIATIONS [In millions of dollars] S 7229 Military Military Military Defense procurement construction construction appropriation authorization authorization appropriation bill billy billy bill Procurement: Production base support -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Ground support equipment---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Spartan components--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total--------------------------------------------- 342.7 ----- 342.7 Construction: Site acquisition and construction________________________________ 227-3 227.3 _______-______ Operations and maintenance__________________________________________________ _______-______- 39.0 Military personnel--------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5.7 Total, Sentinel deployment ____________________ Sentinel It. & D -------------------------------------------- 312.9 -------------------------- 312.9 Total,Sentinel-------------------------------------- --- 655.6 ---------------------------- 700.3 Other ABM It. & D.: Nike-X------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Defender---------------------------------------------- 268.0 -------------------------- 268.0 1& 3295, passed Apr. 19. z H.R. 16703. MISSILE DEFENSE FUNDING REQUESTS-FISCAL YEAR 1969 DEFENSE APPROPRIATIONS -Production base support ------------------- ___ 137.2 Ground support equipment_____________________ 199.2 Spartan components__________________________ 6.3 Total------------------------------------- 342.7 Construction: Site acquisition and construction----___ 1227.3 Operations and maintenance_______________________ 39.0 Military personnel_______________________________ 5.7 Total, Sentinel deployment___________________ 614.7 Sentinel It. & D --------------------------------- 312.9 Total,Sentinel -------------------------- Other ABM It. & D.: Nike-X---------------------------------- 165.0 Defender-_-_----------------------------- --- 103.0 Total---------------------------------- Total, ABM request 2------------ _------ _---- 1,195.6 r Does not include $36 000,000 to be carried over from fiscal year 1968 appropriation for construction planning. 2In addition, AEC appropriation will reportedly include $324,500,000 for Sentinel. EXHIBIT 2 [From the Scientific American, March 1968] ANTI-BALLISTIC-MISSILE SYSTEMS (By Richard L. Darwin and Hans A. Bethe) (NoTE -The U.S. Is now building a "light" ABM system. The authors argue that offen- sive tactics and cheap penetration aids could nullify the effectiveness of this system and any other visualized so far.) Last September, Secretary of Defense Mc- Namara announced that the U.S. would build "a relatively light and reliable Chinese- oriented ABM system." With this statement he apparently ended a long and complex de- bate on the merits of any kind of anti- ballistic-missile system in an age of intercon- tinental ballistic missiles carrying multimeg- aton thermonuclear warheads. Secretary Mc- Namara added that the U.S. would "begin actual production of such a system at the end of this year," meaning the end of 1967. As two physicists who have been concerned for many years with the development and deployment of modern nuclear weapons we wish to offer some comments on this impor- tant matter. On examining the capabilities of ABM systems of various types, and on con- sidering the stratagems available to a deter- mined enemy who sought to nullify the effec- tiveness of such a system, we have come to the conclusion that the "light" system de- scribed by Secretary McNamara will add lit- tle, if anything, to the influences that should restrain China Indefinitely from an attack on the U.S. First among these factors is China's certain knowledge that, in McNa- mara's words, "we have the power not only to destroy completely her entire nuclear offen- sive forces but to devastate her society as well." An even more pertinent argument against the proposed ABM system, in our view, is that it will nourish the illusion that an effec- tive defense against ballistic missiles is pos- sible and will lead almost inevitably to de- mands that the light system, the estimated cost of which exceeds $5 billion, be expanded into a heavy system that could cost upward of $40 billion. The folly of undertaking to Secretary McNamara. "It is important to un- derstand," he said-, "that none of the [ABM] systems at the present or foreseeable state of the art would provide an impenetrable shield over the United States. . Let me make it very clear that the [cost] in itself Is not the problem: the penetrability of the proposed shield is the problem." In our view the penetrability of the light, Chinese-oriented shield is also a problem. It does not seem credible to us that, even if the Chinese, succumbed to the "insane and suicidal" impulse to launch a nuclear attack on the U.S. within the next decade, they would also be foolish enough to have built complex and expensive missiles and nuclear warheads peculiarly vulnerable to the light ABM system now presumably under construc- tion (a system whose characteristics and capabilities have been well publicized). In the area of strategic weapons a common understanding of the major elements and technical possibilities is essential to an in- formed and reasoned choice by the people, through their government, of a proper course of action. In this article we shall outline in general terms, using nonsecret information, the techniques an enemy could employ at no great cost to reduce the effectiveness of an ABM system even more elaborate than the one the Chinese will face. First, however, let us describe that system. Known as the Sentinel System, It will pro- vide for long-range Interception by Spartan antimissile missiles and short-range inter- ception by Sprint antimissile missiles. Both types of missile will be armed with thermo- nuclear warheads for the purpose of destroy- ing or inactivating the attacker's thermo- nuclear weapons, which will be borne through the atmosphere and to their targets by re- entry vehicles (RV's). The Spartan missiles, whose range is a few hundred kilometers, will be fired when an attacker's reentry vehicles are first detected rising above the horizon by perimeter acquisition radar (PAR). Approved For Release 2004/05/12 CIA-RDP70B00338R000200170119-7 Approved For Release 2004/05/12 : CIA-RDP70B00338R000200170119-7 S7230 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE If the attacker is using his available propulsion to deliver maximum payload, his reentry vehicles will follow a normal mini- mum-energy trajectory, and they will first be sighted by one of the PAR's when they are about 4,000 kilometers, or about 10 minutes, away. If the attacker chooses to launch his rockets with less than maximum payload, he can put them either in a loftedtrajectory or in a depressed one. The lofted trajectory has certain advantages against a terminal de- fense system. The most extreme example of a depressed trajectory is the path followed by a IoW-orbit satellite. On such a trajectory a reentry vehicle could remain below an alti- tude of 160 kilometers and would not be visible to the horizon-search radar until it was some 1,400 kilometers, or about three minutes, away. This is FOBS: the fractional- -orbit bombardment system, which allows in- tercontinental ballistic missiles to deliver perhaps 50 to 75 percent of their normal payload. In the Sentinel system Spartans will be launched when PAR has sighted an Incom- ing missile; they will be capable of inter- cepting the missile at a distance of several hundred kilometers. To provide a light shield for the entire U.S. about half a dozen PAR 'units will be deployed along the northern border of the country to detect missiles ap- proaching from the general direction of the North Pole. Each PAR will be linked to sev- eral "farms" of long-range Spartan missiles, which can be hundreds of kilometers away. Next to each Spartan farm will be a farm of Sprint missiles together with missilesite radar (MSR), whose function is to help guide both the Spartans and the shorter-range Sprints to their targets. The task of the Sprints is to provide terminal protection for the Important Spartans and MSR's. The PAR's will also be protected by Sprints and thus will require MSR's nearby. Whereas the Spartans are expected to in- tercept an enemy missile well above the upper atmosphere, the Sprints are designed to be effective within the atmosphere, at alti- tudes below 35 kilometers. The explosion of an ABM missile's thermonuclear warhead will produce a huge flux of X-rays, neutrons and, other particles, and within the atmos- phere a powerful blast wave as well. We shall describe later how X-rays, particles and blast can incapacitate a reentry vehicle. Before we consider in detail the capabili- ties and limitations of ABM systems, one of us (Garwin) will briefly summarize the pres- ent strategic position of the U.S. The pri- mary fact is that the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. can annihilate each other as viable civilizations within a day and perhaps within an hour. Each can at will inflict on the other more than 120 million immediate deaths, to which must be added deaths that will be caused by fire, fallout, disease and starva- tibn.In addition more than 75 percent of the productive capacity of each country would be destroyed, regardless of who strikes first. At present, therefore, each of the two coun- tries has an assured destruction capability with respect to the other. It is usually as- sumed that a nation faced with the assured destruction of 30 percent of its population and productive capacity will be deterred from destroying another nation, no matter how serious the grievance. Assured destruction is therefore not a very flexible political or mili- tary tool. It serves only to preserve a nation from complete destruction. More conven- tional military forces are needed to fill the more conventional military role. Assured destruction was not possible until the advent of thermonuclear weapons in the middle 1950's At first, when one had to depend on aircraft to deliver such weap- ons, destruction was not really assured be- cause a strategic air force is subject to sur- paise attack, to problems of command and control and to. attrition by the air defenses of the other side. All of this was changed by the development of the intercontinental ballistic missile and also, although to a lesser extent, by modifications of our B-52 force that would enable it to penetrate enemy defenses at low altitude. There is no doubt today that the U.S.S.R. and the U.S. have achieved mutual assured destruction. The U.S. has 1,000 Minuteman missiles In hardened "silos" and 54 much larger Titan II missiles. In addition we have 656 Polaris missiles in 41 submarines and nearly 700 long-range bombers. The Minutemen alone could survive a surprise attack and achieve assured destruction of the attacker, In his recent annual report the Secretary of De- fense estimated that as of October, 1967, the U.S.S.R. had' some 720 Intercontinental ballistic missiles, about 30 submarine- launched ballistic missiles (excluding many that are airborne rather than ballistic) and about 165 long-range bombers. This force provides assured destruction of the U.S. Secretary McNamara has also stated that U.S. forces can deliver more than 2,000 thermonuclear weapons with an average yield of one megaton, and that fewer than 400 such weapons would be needed for assured destruction of a third of the U.S.S.R: s population and three-fourths of its indus- try. The U.S.S.R. would need somewhat fewer weapons to achieve the same results against the U.S. It is worth remembering that intercon- tinental missiles and nuclear weapons are not the only means of mass destruction. They are, however, among the most reliable, as they were even when they were first made in the 1940's and 1950's One might build a strategic force somewhat differently today, but the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. have no Incen- tive for doing so. In fact, the chief virtue of assured destruction may be that it removes the need to race-there ? is no reward for getting ahead. One really should not worry too much about new means for delivering nuclear weapons (such as bombs in orbit or fractional-orbit systems) or about advances in chemical or biological warfare. A single thermonuclear assured-destruction force can deter such novel kinds of attack as well. Now, as Secretary McNamara stated in his September speech, our defense experts reck- oned conservatively six to 10 years ago, when our present strategic-force levels were planned. The result is that we have right, now many more missiles than we need for assured destruction of the U.S.S.R. If war comes, therefore, the U.S. Will use the excess force in a "damage-limiting" role, which means firing the excess at those elements of the Russian strategic force that would do the most damage to the U.S. Inasmuch as the U.S.S.R. has achieved the level of assured destruction, this action will not preserve the U.S., but it should reduce the damage, perhaps sparing a small city here or there or reducing somewhat the forces the U.S.S.R. can use against our allies. To the extent that this damage-limiting use of our forces re- duces the damage done to the U.S.S.R. it may slightly reduce the deterrent effect resulting from assured destruction. It must be clear that only surplus forces will be used in this way. It should be said, however, that the exact level of casualties and industrial damage required to destroy a nation as a viable society has been the subject of sur- prisingly little research or even argument. One can conceive of three threats to the present rather comforting situation of mutual assured destruction. The first would be an effective counterforce system: a system that would enable the U.S. (or the U.S.S.R.) to incapacitate the other side's strategic forces before they could be used. The second would be an. effective ballistic-missile de- fense combined with an effective antiaircraft system. The third would be a transition from a bipolar world, in which the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. alone possess. overwhelming power, June 13, 1968 to a multipolar world including, for instance, China. Such threats are of course more 'a n'- risome in combination than individually. American and Russian defense planners are constantly evaluating less-than-perfect intelligence to see if any or all of these threats are developing. For purposes of dis- cussion let us ask what responses a White side might make to various moves made by a Black side. Assume that Black has threatened to negate White's capability of assured de- struction. by doing one of the following things: (1) it has procured more intercon- tinental missiles, (2) it has. installed some missile defense or (3) it has built up a large operational force of missiles each of which can attack several targets, using "multiple Independently targetable reentry vehicles" (MIRV's). White's goal Is to maintain assured de- struction. He Is now worried that Black may be able to reduce to a dangerous level the number of White warheads that will reach their target. White's simplest response to all three threats-but not necessarily the most effective or the cheapest-is to provide himself with more launch vehicles. In addi- tion, in order to meet the first and third threats White will try to make his launchers more difficult to destroy by one or more of the following means: by making them mo- bile (for example by placing them in sub- marines or on railroad cars), by further hardening their permanent sites or by de- dending them with an ABM system. Another possibility that is less often dis- cussed would be for White to arrange to fire the bulk of his warheads on "eval- uation of threat." In other words, White could fire his land-based ballistic missiles when some fraction of them. had already been destroyed by enemy warheads, or when an overwhelming attack is about to destroy them. To implement such a capability re- sponsibly requires excellent communica- tions, and the decision to fire would have to be made within minutes, leading to the execution of a prearranged firing plan. As a complete alternative to hardening and mo- bility, this fire-now-or-never capability would lead to tension and even, in the event of an accident, to catastrophe. Still, as a sup- plemental capability to ease fears of effec- tive counterforce action, it may have some merit. White's response to the second threat- an increase in Black's ABM defenses-might be limited to deploying more launchers, with the simple goal of saturating and. exhausting Black's defenses. But White would also want to consider the cost and effectiveness of the following: penetration aids, concentrating on undefended or lightly defended targets, maneuvering reentry vehicles or multiple reentry vehicles. The last refers to several reentry vehicles carried by the same mis- sile; the defense would have to destroy all of them to avoid damage. Finally, White could reopen the question of whether he should seek assured destruction solely by means of missiles, For example, he might reexamine the effectiveness of low-altitude bombers or be might turn his attention to chemical or biological weapons. It does not much matter how assured destruction is achieved. The important thing, as Secretary McNamara has emphasized, is that the other side find it credible. ("The point is that a potential aggressor must himself believe that our assured destruction capability is in fact actual, and that our will to use it, in re- taliation to an attack is in fact unwaver- ing.") It is clear that White has many options, and that he will choose those that are most reliable or those that are cheapest for a given level of assured destruction. Although rela- tive costs do depend on the level of destruc- tion required, the important technical con- clusion is that for conventional levels of as- sured destruction it is considerably cheaper Approved For Release 2004/05/12 : CIA-RDP70B00338R000200170119-7 Approved For Release 2004/05/12: CIA-RDP70B00338R000200170119-7 Tune 13, 1968 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE fob White to provide more offensive capabil- ity than it is for Black to defend his people and industry against a concerted strike. As an aside, It might be mentioned that scientists newly engaged in the evaluation of military systems often have trouble grasp- ing that large systems of the type created by or for the military are divided quite rigidly into several chronological stages, namely, in reverse order: operation, deploy- ment, development and research. An opera- tional system is not threatened by a system that is still in development; the threat is not real until the new system is in fact deployed, shaken down and fully operative. This is particularly true for an ABM system, which Is obliged to operate against large numbers of relatively independent intercontinental ballistic missiles. it is equally true, however, for counterforce reentry vehicles, which can be ignored unless they are built by the hun- dreds or thousands. The same goes for MIRV's, a development of the multiple reen- try vehicle in which each reentry vehicle is independently directed to a separate target, One must distinguish clearly between the possibility of development and the develop- ment itself, and similarly between develop- ment and actual operation. One must refrain from attributing to a specific defense system, such as Sentinel, those capabilities that might be obtained by further development ,of a different system. It follows that the Sentinel light ABM sys- tem, to be 'built now and to be operational in the early 1970's against a possible Chinese Intercontinental ballistic missile threat, will have to reckon with a missile force unlike either the Russian or the American force, both of which were, after all, built when -there was no ballistic-missile defense The Chinese Will probably build even their first operational intercontinental ballistic mis- siles so that they will have a chance to pene- trate Moreover, we believe it is well within China's capabilities to do a good job at this without Intensive testing or tremendous sacrifice in payload. Temporarily leaving aside penetration aids, there are two -pure strategies for attack against a ballistic-missile defense. The first is an all-warhead attack in which one uses large booster rockets to transport many small (that Is, fractional-megaton) warheads. These warheads are separated at some instant between the time the missile leaves the at- mosphere and the time of reentry. The war- heads from one missile can all be directed against the same large target (such as a city) ; these multiple reentry vehicles (MRV's) are purely a penetration aid. Alternatively each of the reentry vehicles can be given an inde- pendent boost to a different target, thus mak- ing them into MIRV's. MIRV is not a pene- tration aid but is rather a counterforce weap- on: if each of the reentry vehicles has very high accuracy, then it is conceivable that each of them may destroy an enemy missile silo. The Titan II liquid-fuel rocket, designed more than 10 years ago, could carry 20 or more thermonuclear weapons, If these were employed simply as MRV's, the 54 Titans could provide more than 1,000 reentry ve- hicles for the defense to deal with. Since the Spartan Interceptors will each cost $1 million to $2 million, including their thermonuclear warheads, It is reasonable to believe thermonuclear warheads can be de- livered for less than it will cost the defender to intercept them, The attacker can make a further relative saving by concentrating his strike so that most of the Interceptors, all bought and paid for, have nothing to shoot at. This is a high-reliability penetration strat- egy open to any country that can afford to spend a reasonable fraction of the amount its opponent can spend for defense. The second pure strategy for attack against an ABM defense is to precede the actual at- tack with an all-decoy attack or to mix real warheads with decoys. This can be achieved rather cheaply by firing large rockets from unhardened sites to send light, unguided de- coys more or less in the direction of plausible city targets. If the ABM defense is an area defense like the Sentinel system, it must fire against these threatening objects at very long range before they reenter the atmosphere, where because of their lightness they would behave differently from real warheads. Several hundred to several thousand such decoys launched by a few large vehicles could readily exhaust a Sentinel-like system. The attack with real warheads would then follow. The key point is that since the putative Chinese intercontinental-ballistic-missile force is still in the early research and devel- opment stage, it can and will be designed to deal with the Sentinel system, whose inter- ceptors and sensors are nearing production and are rather well publicized. It is much easier to design a missile force to counter l a defense that is already being deployed than to design one for any of the possible defense systems that might or might not be deploy"l sometime in the future. One of us (Bethe) will now describe (1) the physical mechanisms by which an ABM missile can destroy or damage an Incoming warhead and (2) some of the penetration aids available to an attacker who is deter- mined to have his warheads reach their targets. Much study has been' given to the pos- sibility of using conventional explosives rather than a thermonuclear explosive in the warhead of a defensive missile. The answer is that the "kill" radius of a conventional explosive-is much too small to be practical in a likely tactical engagement. We shall con- sider here only the more important effects of the defensive thermonuclear weapon: the emission of neutrons, the emission of X rays and, when the weapon is exploded in the at- mosphere, blast. Neutrons have the ability to penetrate matter of any kind. Those released by de- fensive weapons could penetrate the heat shield and outer jacket of an offensive war- head and enter the fissile material itself, causing the atoms to fission and generating large amounts of heat. If sufficient heat is generated, the fissile material will melt and lose its carefully designed shape. Thereafter it can no longer be detonated. The kill radius for neutrons depends on the design of the offensive weapon and the yield, or energy release, of the defensive weapon. The miss distance, or distance of closest approach between the defensive and the offensive missiles, can be made small enough to achieve a kill by the neutron mechanism, This is particularly true if the defensive missile and radar have high per- formance and the interception is made no more than a few tens of kilometers from the ABM launch site. The neutron-kill mechanism is therefore practical for the short-range defense of a city or other im- portant target. It is highly desirable that the yield of the defensive warhead be kept low to minimize the effects of blast and heat on the city being defended. The attacker can, of course, attempt to shield the fissile material in the offensive warhead from neutron damage, but the mass of shielding needed is substantial. Witness the massive shield required to keep neutrons from escaping from nuclear reactors. The size of the reentry vehicle will enable the defense to make a rough estimate of the amount of shielding that can be carried and thus to estimate the intensity of neutrons required to melt the warhead's fissile material. Let us consider next the effect of X rays. These rays carry off most of the energy emitted by nuclear weapons, especially those in the megaton range. If sufficient X-ray energy falls on a reentry vehicle, it will cause the surface layer of the vehicle's heat shield to evaporate. This in itself may not be too damaging, but the vapor leaves the surface S7231 at high velocity in a very brief time and the recoil sets up a powerful shock wave in the heat shield. The shock may destroy the heat shield material or the underlying structure. X rays are particularly effective above the upper atmosphere, where they can travel to their target without being absorbed by air molecules. The defense can therefore use megaton weapons without endangering the population below; it is protected by the inter- vening atmosphere. The kill radius can then be many kilometers. This reduces the ac- curacy required of the defensive missile and allows successful interception at ranges of hundreds of kilometers from the ABM launch site. Thus X rays make possible an area defense and provide the key to the Sentinel system. On the other hand, the reentry vehicle can he hardened against X-ray damage to a considerable extent. And in general the de- fender will not know if the vehicle has been damaged until it reenters the atmosphere. If it has been severely damaged, it may break up or burn up. If this does not happen, how- ever, the defender is helpless unless he has also constructed an effective terminal, or short-range, defense system. The third kill mechanism-blast-can operate only in the atmosphere and requires little comment. Ordinarily when an offensive warhead reenters the atmosphere it is de- celerated by a force that, at maximum, is on the order of 100 g. (One g is the acceleration due to the earth's gravity.) The increased atmospheric density reached within a shock wave from a nuclear explosion in air can pro- duce a deceleration several times greater. But just as one can shield against neutrons and X rays one can shield against blast by de- signing the reentry vehicle to have great structural strength. Moreover, the defense, not knowing the detailed design of the re- entry vehicle, has little way of knowing if it has destroyed a given vehicle by blast until the warhead either goes off or fails to do so. The main difficulty for the defense is the fact that in all probability the offensive re- entry vehicle will not arrive as a single object that can be tracked and fired on but will be accompanied by many other objects deliber- ately placed there by the offense. These objects come under the heading of penetra- tion aids. We shall discuss only a few of the many types of such aids. They include frag- ments of the booster rocket, decoys, fine metal wires called chaff, electronic counter- measures and blackout mechanisms of several kinds. The last stage of the booster that has pro- pelled the offensive missile may disintegrate into fragments or it can be fragmented de- liberately. Some of the pieces will have a radar cross section comparable to or larger than the cross section of the reentry vehicle itself. The defensive radar therefore has the task of discriminating between a mass of de- bris and the warhead. Although various means of discrimination are effective to some extent, radar and data processing must be specifically set up for this purpose. In any case the radar must deal with tens of objects for each genuine target, and this imposes considerable complexity on the system. There is, of course, an easy way to dis- criminate among such objects: let the whole swarm reenter the atmosphere. The lighter booster fragments will soon be slowed down, whereas the heavier reentry vehicle will con- tinue to fall with essentially undiminished speed. If a swarm of objects is allowed to re- enter, however, one must abandon the con- cept of area defense and construct a terminal defense system. If a nation insists on re- taining a pure area defense, it must be pre- pared to shoot at every threatening object. Not only is this extremely costly but also it can quickly exhaust the supply of anti- missile missiles. Instead of relying on the accidental targets provided by booster fragments, the offense Approved For Release 2004/05/12 : CIA-RDP70B00338R000200170119-7 S 7232 Approved For Release 2004/05/12 : CIA-RDP70B00338R000200170119-7 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE June 13, 196'8 will almost certainly want to employ decoys that closely imitate the radar reflectivity of the reentry vehicle. One cheap and simple decoy Is a balloon with the same shape as the reentry vehicle. It can be made of thin plastic covered with metal in the form of foil, strips or wire mesh. A considerable num- ber of such balloons can be carried unin- fiated by a single offensive missile and re- leased when the missile has risen. above the atmosphere. The chief difficulty with balloons is putting them on a "credible" trajectory, that is, a trajectory aimed at a city or some other plausible target. Nonetheless, if the defend- Ing force employs an area defense and really seeks to protect the entire country, it must try to intercept every suspicious object, In- cluding balloon decoys. The defense may, however, decide not to shoot at incoming objects that seem to be directed against non- vital targets; thus it may choose to limit possible damage to the country rather than to avoid all damage. The offense could then take the option of directing live warheads against points on ,he outskirts of cities, where a nuclear explosion would still produce radioactivity and possibly severe fallout over densely populated regions. Worse, the possi- bility that reentry vehicles can be built to maneuver makes it dangerous to ignore ob- jects even 100 kilometers off target. Balloon decoys, even more than booster fragments, will be rapidly slowed by the at- mosphere and will tend to burn up when they reenter it. Here again a terminal ABM system has a far better chance than an area defense system to discriminate between decoys and warheads. One possibility for an area system is "active" discrimination. If a defensive nuclear missile is exploded some- where in the cloud of balloon decays travel- ing with a reentry vehicle, the balloons will either be destroyed by radiation from the explosion or will be blown far off course. The reentry vehicle presumably will survive. If the remaining set of objects is examined by radar, the reentry vehicle may stand out clearly. It can then be killed by a second interceptor shot. Such a shoot-look-shoot tactic may be effective, but it obviously places severe demands on the ABM missiles and the radar tracking system. Moreover, it can be countered by the use of small, dense decoys within the balloon swarms. Moreover, it may be possible to develop de- coys that are as resistant to X rays as the reentry vehicle and also are simple and com- pact. Their radar reflectivity could be made to simulate that of a reentry vehicle over a wide range of frequencies. The decoys could also be made to reenter the atmosphere--at least down to a fairly low altitude-in a way that closely mimicked an actual reentry ve- hicle. The design of such decoys, however, would require considerable experimentation and development. Another way to confuse the defensive ra- dar is to scatter the fine metal wires of chaff. If such wires are cut to about half the wave- length of the defensive radar, each wire will act as a reflecting dipole with a radar cross section approximately equal to the wave- length squared divided by 2r. The actual length of the wires is not critical; a wire of a given length Is also effective against radar of shorter wavelength. Assuming that the radar wavelength is one meter and that one- mil copper wire is out to half-meter lengths, one can easily calculate that 100 million chaff wires will weigh only 200 kilograms (440 pounds). The chaff wires could be dispersed over a large volume of space; the chaff could be so dense and provide such large radar reflec- tion that the reentry vehicle could not be seen against the background noise. The de- fense would then not know where in the large reflecting cloud the reentry vehicle Is concealed. The defense would be induced to spend several interceptors to cover the entire cloud, with no certainty, even so, that the hidden reentry vehicle will be killed. How much of the chaff would survive the defense nuclear explosion is another difficult ques- tion. The main problem for the attacker is to develop a way to disperse chaff more or less uniformly. An active alternative to the use of chaff is to equip some decoys with electronic devices that generate radio noise at frequencies se- lected to jam the defensive radar. There are many variations on such electronic counter- measures, among them the use of jammers on the reentry vehicles themselves. The last of the penetration aids that will be mentioned here is the radar blackout caused by the large number of free electrons released by a nuclear explosion. These elec- trons, except for a few, are removed from atoms or molecules of air, which thereby become ions. There are two main causes for the formation of ions: the fireball of the explosion, which produces ions because of its high temperature, and the radioactive debris of the explosion, which releases beta rays (high-energy electrons) that ionize the air they traverse. The second mechanism is im- portant only at high altitude. The electrons in an ionized cloud of gas have the property of bending and absorbing electromagnetic waves, particularly those of low frequency. Attenuation can reach such high values that the defensive radar is pre- vented from seeing any object behind the ionized cloud (unlike chaff, which confuses the radar only at the chaff range and not beyond). Blackout is a severe problem for an area defense designed to intercept missiles above the upper atmosphere. The problem is aggra- vated because area-defense radar is likely to employ low-frequency (long) waves, which are the most suitable for detecting enemy missiles at long range. In some recent pop- ular articles long-wave radar has been hailed as the cure for the problems of the ABM missile. It is not. Even though it Increases the capability of the radar in some ways, it makes the system more vulnerable to black- out. Blackout can be caused in two ways: by the defensive nuclear explosions themselves and by deliberate explosions set off at high altitude by the attacker. Although the for- mer are unavoidable, the defense has the choice of setting them off at altitudes and in- locations that will cause the minimum blackout of its radar. The offense can sacri- fice a few early missiles to cause blackout at strategic locations. In what follows we shall assume for purposes of discussion that the radar wavelength is one meter. Transla- tion to other wavelengths-is not difficult. In order to totally reflect the one-meter waves from our hypothetical radar it is nec- essary for the attacker to create an ionized cloud containing 109 electrons per cubic centimeter. Much smaller electron densities, however, will suffice for considerable attenu- ation. For the benefit of technically minded readers, the equation for attenuation in decibels per kilometer is 4.34 cope X_ib> [u2-{"Yc2 Ye. Here wp is the plasma frequency for the given electron density, w is the radar fre- quency in radians per second and ya is the frequency of collisions of an electron with atoms of air. At normal temperatures, this frequency Co is the number 2 X 1011 multi- plied by the density of the air (p) compared with sea-level density (po), or -y,=2X1011 p/po. At altitudes above 30 kilometers, where an area-defense system will have to make most of its interceptions, the density of air is less than .01 of the density at sea level. Under these conditions the electron collision fre- quency y? Is less than the value of w=(2,r X 3 X 108) and therefore can be neglected In the denominator of the equation. Using that equation, we can then specify the number of electrons. N0, needed to attenuate one-meter radar waves by a factor of more than one decible per kilometer:N0 > 350p./p. At an al- titude of 30 kilometers, where po/p is about 100, Na is about 3 X 10?, and at 60 kilometers N. is still only about 3 X 10?. Thus the elec- tron densities needed for the substantial at- tenuation of a radar signal are well under the 101 electrons per cubic centimeter required for total reflection. The ionized cloud created by the fireball of a nuclear explosion is typi- cally 10 kilometers thick; if the attenuation is one decibel per kilometer, such a cloud would produce a total attenuation of 10 deci- bels. This implies a tenfold reduction of the outgoing radar signal and another tenfold reduction of the reflected signal, which amounts to effective blackout. The temperature of the fireball created by a nuclear explosion in the atmosphere is initially hundreds of thousands of degrees centigrade. It quickly cools by radiation to about 5,000 degrees C. Thereafter cooling is produced primarily by the cold air entrained by the fireball as it rises slowly through the atmosphere, a process that takes several min- utes. When air is heated to 5,000 degrees C., it is strongly ionized. To produce a radar attenu- ation of one decibel per kilometer at an alti- tude of 90 kilometers the fireball temperature need be only 3,000 degrees, and at 50 kilom- eters a temperature of 2,000 degrees will suf- fice. Ionization may be enhanced by the pres- ence in the fireball of iron, uranium and other metals, which are normally present in the debris of nuclear explosion. The size of the fireball can easily be esti- mated. Its diameter is about one kilometer for a one-megaton explosion at sea level. For other altitudes and yields there is a simple scaling law: the fireball diameter is equal to (Ypo/p)Ila, where Y is the yield in megatons. Thus a fireball one kilometer in diameter can be produced at an altitude of 30 kilometers (where po/p = 100) by an explosion of only 10 kilotons. At an altitude of 50 kilometers (where pulp = 1,000), a one-megaton explosion will produce a fireball 10 kilometers in diam- eter. At still higher altitudes matters be- come complicated because the density of the atmosphere falls off so sharply and the mech- anisms of heating the atmosphere changes. Nevertheless, fireballs of very large diameter can be expected when megaton weapons are exploded above 100 kilometers. These could well black out areas of the sky measured in thousands of square kilometers. For explosions at very high altitudes (be- tween 100 and 200 kilometers) other phenom- ena become significant, Collisions between electrons and air molecules are now unim- portant. The condition for blackout is simply that there be more than 101 electrons per cubic centimeter. At the same time very little mass of air is available to cool the fireball. If the air is at first fully ionized by the explosion, the air molecules will be dissociated into atoms. The atomic ions combine very slowly with elec- trons. When the density Is low enough, as it is at high altitude, the recombination can take place only by radiation. The radiative recombination constant (call it Ce) is about 10-13 cubic centimeter per second. When the initial electron density is well above 109 per cubic centimeter, the number oi. electrons remaining after time t is roughly equal to 1/Ont. Thus if the initial electron density is 1013 per cubic centimeter, the density will remain above 109 for 1,000 seconds, or some 17 minutes. The conclusion is that nuclear explosions at very high altitude can produce long-lasting blackouts over large areas. The second of the two mechanisms for producing an ionized cloud, the beta rays issuing from the radioactive debris of a nu- clear explosion, can be even more effective than the fireball mechanism. If the debris Approved For Release 2004/05/12 : CIA-RDP70B00338R000200170119-7 ~4nnrnvPrlI~a1?Rdf~i9>RIItI L$R000200170119-7 S 7233 is at high altitude, the beta rays will follow Namara estimated , cost ry tco~ ter measures in ethe ars, but t past siderably slower rate than es a f n ' etic s mag the lines of force in the earth field with about half of the beta rays going , Immediately down into the atmosphere and the other half traveling out into space before returning earthward. These beta rays have an average energy Of about 500,000 electron volts, and when they strike the atmosphere, they ionize air molecules. Beta rays of aver- age energy penetrate to an altitude of about 60 kilometers; some of the more energetic rays go down to about 50 kilometers. At these levels, then, a high-altitude explosion will give rise to sustained ionization as long as the debris of the explosion stays in the vicinity. One can show that blackout will occur if yXt-1.2>10-2, where t is the time after the explosion in seconds and y is the fission yield deposited per unit horizontal area of the debris cloud, measured in tons of TNT equiv- alent per square kilometer. The factor t-'-2 expresses the rate of decay of the radioactive debris. If the attacker wishes to cause a blackout lasting five minutes "(t=300), he can achieve it with a debris level y equal to 10 tons of fission yield per square kilometer. This could be attained by spreading one megaton of fission products over a circular area about 400 kilometers in diameter at an altitude of, say, `60 kilometers. Very little -could be seen by an area-defense radar at- tempting to look out from under such a blackout disk. Whether or not such a disk would actually be produced is another ques- tion. Terminal defense would not, of course, be greatly disturbed by a beta ray blackout. The foregoing discussion has concentrated mainly on the penetration aids that can be devised against an ?area-defense system. By this we do not mean to suggest that a ter- minal-defense system can be effective, and we certainly do not wish to imply that we favor, the development and deployment of -such a system. Terminal defense has a vulnerability all Its own. Since it defends only a small area, it can easily be bypassed. Suppose that the 20 largest American cities were provided with terminal defense. It would be easy for an enemy to attack the 21st largest city and as many other undefended cities as he chose. Although the population per target would be less than if the largest cities were attacked, casualties would still be heavy. Alternatively the offense could concentrate on just a few of the 20largest cities and ex- haust their supply of antimissile missiles, which could readily be done by the use of multiple warheads even without decoys. ens de that the offense can take. He finds invari- As you may recall, I announced last No- ably that the offense, by spending consider- vember thaat the Soviets were intensively ably less money than the defense, can re- testing what we believe to be a Fractional store casualties and destruction to the origi- Orbit Bombardment System (FOBS). Such a nal level before defenses were installed. Since system-which is really an ICBM of different the offense Is likely to be "conservative," it trajectory-could be launched on a very low is our belief that the actual casualty figures trajectory across the northern approaches of in a nuclear exchange, after both sides had the United States, thus, reducing the possi- deployed ABM systems and simultaneously bility of timely detection by the Ballistic increased offensive forces, would be worse Missile Early Warning System (BMEWS); or, than these estimates suggest. - alternatively, around the southern ap- Any such massive escalation of offensive proaches which are not covered by BMEWS. and defensive armaments could hardly be In either event, the weapon would not have accomplished in a democracy without strong a very high order of accuracy and would have social and psychological effects. The nation to pay a heavy penalty in payload. It would, would think more of war, prepare more for therefore, be useful primarily against soft war, hate the potential enemy and thereby targets. Although years ago we considered make war more likely. The policy of both and rejected such a system for our own use, the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. in the past decade the Soviets may believe it to be useful in a has been to reduce tensions to provide more surprise nuclear strike against our bomber understanding, and to devise weapon sys- bases or as a penetration tactic against ABM tems that make war less likely. It seems to systems. Later, in my discussion of the de- us that this should remain our policy. fensiye programs, I will touch on some of the STATEMENT BY SECRETARY OF DEFENSE ROBERT S. MCNAMARA N M y Before I discuss the analytical basis for these conclusions and Our specific program proposals, I would first like to present the latest estimates of the strategic threat. B. THE SIZE AND CHARACTER OF THE THREAT Each year in presenting our projections of the strategic nuclear threat to the United States, I have cautioned that while we have reasonably high confidence in our estimates for the closer-in period, our estimates for the more distant years are subject to con- siderable uncertainty. This is still the case with regard to our current projections. The estimates through 1969 are reasonably firm. Beyond that point they become progressively less firm, especially where they deal with the period beyond the production and deploy- ment leadtimes of the weapons systems involved. 1. The Soviet strategic offensive-defensive forces Summarized in the following table are the Soviet strategic offensive forces estimated for October 1, 1967. The programmed U.S. forces for those same dates are shown for comparison: UNITED STATES VERSUS SOVIET INTERCONTINENTAL STRATEGIC NUCLEAR FORCES measures we have taken in anticipation of that type of threat. b. Antiballistic Missile Defense Last year I noted that in addition to the GALOSH system around Moscow, the Soviets were deploying another type of defensive sys- tem elsewhere in the Soviet Union. I cau- tioned, however that the weight of the evidence at the time suggested that this system was not intended primarily for anti- ballistic missile defense. Now, I can tell you that the majority of our intelligence com- munity no longer believes that this so-called "Tallinn" system (which is being deployed across the northwestern approaches to the Soviet Union and in several other places) has any significant ABM capability. This system is apparently designed for use within the at- mosphere, most likely against an aerody- namic rather than a ballistic missile threat. Although construction of the Galosh ABM system around Moscow is proceeding at a moderate pace, nq effort has been made dur- ing the last year to expand that system or extend it to other cities. It is the consensus of the intelligence community that this system could provide a limited defense of the Mos- cow area but that it could be seriously de- graded by sophisticated penetration aids. Nevertheless, knowing what we do about past Soviet predilections for defensive systems, we must, for the time being, plan our forces on the assumption that they will have de- ployed some sort of an ABM system around it was pointed out by Charles M. Herzfeld in The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists a few years ago that a judicious employment of ABM defenses could equalize the risks of living in cities of. various sizes. Suppose New York, with a population of about 10 million, were 'defended well enough to re- quire b0 enemy warheads to penetrate the defenses, plus a few more to destroy the city. If cities of 200,000 inhabitants were left un- defended, it would be equally "attractive" for an enemy to attack New York and pene- trate its defenses as to attack an unde- fended city. .,.,, w nh "lnvina.Y' nattern of ABM t s t rg a e uras i an E s capable of striking ' have MR/IROM are programs ent defense were to be seriously proposed, it is. evelop hard to believe that people the undo- lialso hathe veSSLB M'soon diesel-powered submarines beingtpur missilwie a h gh prior ty. However, fended cities would accept their statistical the Soviets whose primary targets are believed to be strategic land targets it is now clear that they failed to conduct security. To satisfy everyone would require in Eurasia. The Soviets also have submarine-launched cruise ittis a space or a long-range ball co duct -a terminal system of enormous extent. The missiles whose primary targets we believe to be naval and either a space before the end of ll sti as is- Highest cost estimate made in public dis- m4inaaddtion lsto the intercontinental bombers, the Soviets thought possible last year. We still believe cessions, $50 billion, cannot be far wrong. have a force of medium bombers/tankers capable of striking such a launching could be made on relatively Although such a massive system would af- Eurasian targets. short notice. In any event, our estimate last certain .S.Ra t t a. Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles year that it appeared unlikely the Chinese present ford som a rmament, it protection virtually the U.S.S.R.' the Russians would react to the deployment Over the past year, the Soviets have con- could achieve an IOC with an ICBM before of the system. It would be easy for them to tinued their build-up of hardened and dis- the early 1970s, or deploy a significant num- increase the number of their offensive war- persed land-based missiles. We estimate that ber of operational ICBMs before the mid- heads and thereby raise the level of ex- as of 1 October 1967 they had a total of 720 1970s, still holds. And, of course, those ICBMs pected damage back to the one now esti- ICBM launchers operational compared to 340 would not have a very high degree of relia- mated. In his recent forecast of defense a year earlier. We believe the Soviet ICBM bility, speed of response or protection against needs for the next five years, Secretary Mc- force will continue to grow over the next few attack. United States I U.S.S.R. ICBM launchers2------------ --------- 1,054 720 SLBM launchers3--------------------- 656 30 Total, intercontinental missile launchers-------------------- 1,710 Intercontinental bombers 9----------- 697 Total force loadings, approximate num . 2 Excludes ICBM test range launchers which could have some With regard to ICBMs, we continue to be- operational capability against the United States. Soviets also lieve that the Chinese nuclear weapons and Our current estimates of the Red Chinese nuclear threat are essentially the same as those I presented here last year. The Chinese have the technical and industrial capabili- 11' ti a is c f b uired for the deployment o re ti q es missiles and we believe that they are making an intensive effort to develop a medium range missile. We estimate that the first of these missiles could be deployed as early as 1967-68 and that by the mid-1970x, they could have a modest force operational. I These are mid-1967 figures Approved For Release 2004/05/12 : CIA-RDP70B00338R000200170119-7 S 7234 Approved For Rel"a fW(1 NACU- gc eBK17003 IYE 00170119-7 June 13; 1968 - cave several ;types or fiance the future capabilities c aircraft which could carry nuclear weapons, Destruction" forces, including: but most of them have a li it d m e operational radius and none have an intercontinental radius. It is highly unlikely on the basis of cost alone that they would undertake the development, production and deployment of an intercontinental bomber force. If they chose to do so, it would take them a, decade or more before they could deploy such a force. C. CAPABILITIES OF THE PROPOSED U.S. FORCES FOR "ASSURED DESTRUCTION" As I noted earlier, the only true measure of the effectiveness of our "Assured Destruc- tion" forces is their ability, even after ab- sorbing a well-coordinated surprise first strike, to inflict unacceptable damage on the attacker. In this next portion of my State- ment, I would like to examine with you our latest analyses of how well our strategic forces can be expected to accomplish that mission: first, against the "highest expected threat" projected in the latest National In- telligence Estimates and, second, against a Greater-Than-Expected Threat? 1. Capability against the "highest expected threat" in the NIE Even if the Soviet strategic forces by 1972 reach the higher end of the range of esti- mates projected in the latest NIEs andeven If they were to assign their entire available missile force to attacks on our strategic forces (reserving only refire missiles and bomber-delivered weapons for urban targets), about one-half of our forces programmed for 1972 would survive and remain effective. If the Soviets expand the Moscow ABM defense and deploy the same or a similar system around other cities at the highest rate pro- jected in the latest NIEs, about three-quar- ters of our surviving weapons would detonate over their targets. The destructive potential of such a U.S. retaliatory attack Is illustrated by the following table: SOVIET POPULATION AND INDUSTRY DESTROYED [Assumed 1972 total population of 247,000,000; urban population of 116,000,0001 Total population industrial fatalities capacity destroyed Millions Percent (percent) 1 megaton equivalent delivered war- heads: 100------------- 37 15 59 200------------- 52 21 72 400------------- 74 30 76 800------------- 96 39 77 1,200------------ 109 44 77 1,600------------ 1.16 47 77 Even if the Soviets deploy a substantial number of ABM interceptors by 1972, our strategic missile forces alone could still de- stroy more than two-fifths of their total population (more than. 100 million people), and over three-quarters of their industrial capacity: As the foregoing table demon- strates, beyond 400 one-megaton equivalents optimally delivered, further increments Would not meaningfully change the amount of damage inflicted because we would be bringing smaller and smaller cities under attack. These results, of course, reflect the deci- sions we have taken in recent years to en- o The "highest expected threat" is actually composed of the upper range of NIE projec- tions for each element of the Soviets' stra- tegic forces. In many rases, these represent alternatives and it is highly unlikely that all elements would ever reach the top end of the quantitative range simultaneously. Therefore, the "highest expected threat" is really a greater threat than that projected in the NIE. - ~r-~aairua to cnree-quarters of the industrial POSEIDON missile with MIRVs, capacity of the Soviet Union, even after ab- 2. The production and deployment of im- sorbing a surprise attack. The prospect of proved missile penetration aids. having to absorb losses of this magnitude 3. The increase in the proportion of MIN- from a U.S. retaliatory strike should, in it- UTEMAN Ills (with MIRVs and a new im- self, pose a very substantial deterrent to the proved third stage) in the planned force. Soviet Union. Nevertheless, for the purpose 4. The initiation of development of new planning our forces so far ahead, thilevel small reentry vehicles in order to Increase of damage may become too low for complete substantially the number of warheads (or confidence in our deterrent. Accordingly, penetration aids) which can be carried by a prudence dictates that we act now to place single missile. ourselves in a position to strengthen our 5. The development and production of "Assured Destruction" capabilities in the SRAMs for our strategic bombers. unlikely event that both of the Greater- These and other measures will not only Than-Expected Threats actually begin to enhance the survivability of our strategic emerge. missile forces but will also greatly increase Fortunately, we have a large number of the number of weapons which we could place additional options from which we can draw over ? the Soviet Union in 1972. As I stated to strengthen those capabilities by the mid- earlier, numbers of weapons will be much 1970s. We can convert the entire force to more Important in the future than gross Minuteman III, increase the number of war- megatonnage. Our calculations show that, heads each Minuteman missile could carry, even if the Soviets deploy a substantial num- emplace the entire Minuteman III force in ber of ABMs by 1972, our offensive forces superhard silos, and/or protect the Minute- (after absorbing a surprise attack) would man force with an ABM defense. still be able to inflict about the same percent There are, of course, still other options fatalities on the Soviet population in a sec- available, such as the construction and de- ond strike in 1972 as they could have In 1966. ployment of more Poseidon submarines, and Indeed, If the Soviet offensive-defensive the development and production of a new threat does not increase beyond the highest land-based missile. Although a new land- level now projected through 1972 in the latest based ICBM does not appear to offer any par- National Intelligence Estimates, we will have ticular advantage over the Minuteman III more "Assured Destruction" capability than in superhard silos, I believe we should keep we will probably need. However, I have re- that option open by starting development peatedly cautioned that our "Assured De- now of a silo which could be used for either struction" capability is of such crucial im- the Minuteman III or a new ICBM. The op- portance to our security that we must be tions of defending Minuteman with the ABM prepared to cope with Soviet strategic and of constructing more Poseidon subma- threats which are greater than those pro- rines will continue to be available for some jected in the latest intelligence estimates. Ac- time into the future and neither requires a cordingly, we must continually reexamine the commitment at this time. various actions, beyond those which now As I noted in previous years, under certain seem probable, by which the Soviets might circumstances there may be some advantage seek to strengthen their strategic forces and in maintaining a mixed offensive force of take a ro ri t t pp p a e s eps in a timely manner to hedge against them. 2. Capability against "greater-than-expected threats" Aswas the case last year, the most severe threat we must consider in planning our "Assured Destruction" forces is a Soviet de- ployment of a substantial hard target kill capability in the form of highly accurate small ICBMs or MIRVed 12sge ICBMs, to- gether with an extensive, effective ABM de- fense. A large Soviet ICBM force with a sub- stantial hard target kill capability might be able to destroy a large number of our Minuteman missiles in their silos. An ex- tensive, effective Soviet ABM defense might then be able to intercept and destroy a large part of our residual missile warheads, in- cluding those carried by submarine-launched missiles. In combination, therefore, these two actions could conceivably seriously degrade our "Assured Destruction" capability. Again, I want to remind you that both of these threats are quantitatively far greater than those projected in the latest intelligence estimates. Moreover, we believe that the ac- curacy of Soviet ICBMs is still substantiall y inferior to that of our own missiles. Neverthe. less, even though such a threat Is extremely unlikely, we have taken account of the pos- sibility faour longer range force planning. Our calculations show that against either one of the Soviet Greater-Than-Expected missiles and a limited number of bombers. By having a capability to attack some cities with missiles only, and others with bombers only, we can force the Soviet Union to main- tain defenses against both. But to do this, we do not need either a very large bomber force or a new bomber. The present program provides for a mixed force of missiles and bombers into the latter part of the 1970s, and the options open to us will permit extending the life of the bomber force and increasing its capability, and/or the addition of a new bomber, should threats greater than that projected by the NIE develop. Against the Greater-Than-Expected Threat, any bomber force ought to be equipped with improved penetration aids to cope with the kind of anti-bomber defense systems postulated in this threat. We have no evidence the Soviets are actually deploy- ing such systems, although they are devel- oping new high performance fighter aircraft. Nevertheless, we should keep the options open to upgrade our presently programmed bomber force and to deploy a new bomber if one should eventually be required. But the pacing items at the present time are the penetration aids, particularly those needed to counter the improved interceptors the So- viets may deploy in the future, and these are the programs which should receive our first attention regardless of which option we may ultimately choose to exercise. Again, may I remind you that all of these the presently programmed forces could still missile and bomber options are directly re- lated to the combined Greater-Than-Ex- perform their missions through the mid- petted Threat, and until we have some evi- 1970s. dente that this threat is actually beginning Against the massive and highly unlikely to emerge, we need not and should not de- combined Greater-Than-Expected Offensive cide to deploy any of these systems. Instead, and Defensive Threats, these same forces with we should carefully time our actions On all POSEIDON missiles carrying a full load of of them in step with the development of the warheads and with bomber penetration aids threat, keeping in mind the various develop- (options which we could exercise in FY 1970) ment, production and deployment leadtimes could still destroy in a second strike (de- involved. Approved For Release 2004/05/12 : CIA-RDP70B00338R000200170119-7 June '13, 1968 Approved For Release 2004/05/12.: CIA-RDP70B00338R000200170119-7 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD SENATE D CAPABILITIES Or THE PROPOSED FORCES FOR DAMAGE LIMITATION There are two major issues this year in the Damage Limitation portion of the Strategic Forces Program. The first concerns the de- ployment of an anti-ballistic missile defense and, the second, the future size and compo- sition of the anti-bomber defense forces. 1. Anti-ballistic missile defense Last year I presented to you in consider- able detail our analysis of the anti-ballistic missile defense Issue. I described the three major purposes for which we might want to deploy an ABM system, the kinds of radars' and misssles which would be involved, the technical uncertainties which still remained to be resolved, and the costs and benefits of some of the alternative deployments. With regard to the three purposes, I concluded that: 1. The deployment of an ABM defense for MINUTEMAN might offer a partial substi- tute for the further expansion of our offen- sive forces In the event the Greater-Than- Expected Soviet threat began to emerge. 2. The deployment of an austere ABM de- fense against a Red Chinese ICBM threat might offer a high degree of protection to the entire Nation, at least through the 1970s. 3. The deployment of an ABM defense for the protection of our cities against the kind of heavy, sophisticated missile attack the Soviets could launch in the 1970s would al- most surely cause them to react by increas- ing the capabilities of their offensive forces, thus leaving us in essentially the same posi- tion We were before. Further study of this issue during the last year has served to confirm these conclusions. Since I have already touched on the first purpose in connection with the analysis of our "Assured Destruction" capabilities against the Greater-Than-Expected Soviet threat, I will limit my discussion at this point to the other two purposes. a. Defense Against the Red Chinese Nuclear Threat As I noted earlier, there Is mounting evi- dence that the Red Chinese are devoting very substantial resources to the develop- ment of both nuclear warheads and missile delivery systems. Within a period of 39 months, they detonated seven nuclear de- vices. The first, in October 1964, was an all U-235 fission test with a low yield; the sec- ond, in May 1965, was a similar test with a Low-intermediate yield. In May 1966 they detonated their first device involving ther- monuclear material. Then, in October 1966, they tested their first missile-delivered de- vice With a low yield fission, warhead, thus demonstrating sufficient engineering skill to conduct a missile-warhead systems test. in December 1966, they detonated their second device involving thermonuclear material. In June 1967, they detonated a device with a yield of a few megatons dropped from an air- plane. Finally, last December, they detonated another device, but this test was apparently a partial failure. These seven nuclear tests, taken together with their continuing work on surface-to- surface missiles, lead us to believe that they are moving ahead with the development of an ICBM. Indeed, if their programs proceed at the present pace, they could have a modest force of ICBMs by the mid-1970s. In the light of -this. progress in nuclear weapons and missile delivery systems, it seemed both prudent and feasible to us last September` to initiate the deployment of an austere Chinese-oriented ABM defense, We knew from our continuing study of this sys- tem that it could be deployed at an invest- ment cost of about $5 billion, and could be highly effective against the kind of threat a Chinese force might pose in the 1970s. As presently defined, the Sentinel ABM system (i.e., the system specifically designed against the Chinest threat) would consist of Perimeter Acquisition Radars (PARS), Mis- sile Site Radars (MSRs), long range Spartan area defense missiles and, later, some Sprint local defense missiles for certain special pur- poses. The effectiveness of this deployment in reducing U.S. fatalities from a Red Chi- nese attack in the 1970s is shown in the table following: U.S. FATALITIES FROM A CHINESE FIRST STRIKE, 1970's lin millions] U.S. fatalities: Without Sentinel -------- 7 11 15 With Sentinel ----------- (1) (q 1 1 Fewer than 1,000,000 U.S. dead with some probability of no deaths. It is apparent from the foregoing table that the Sentinel system, facing a relatively "primitive" attack, could probably hold U.S. fatalities below one million. Obviously, if and when the Chinese ICBM force grows, quantitatively and qualitatively, beyond the levels shown in the foregoing table, additions and improvements would probably have to be made in the Sentinel system. We believe, however, that for relatively modest additional outlays the system could be improved so as to limit the Chinese damage potential to low levels into the mid-1980s. The Sentinel sys- tem would also have a number of other ad- vantages. It would provide an additional S 7235 indication to the people of Asia that we in- tend to support them against nuclear black- mail from China, and thus help to convince the non-nuclear countries that acquisition of their own nuclear weapons is not required for their security. Furthermore, this initial deployment would serve as a foundation to which we could add a defense for our Min- uteman force If that later becomes desir- able. Finally, it could protect our population against the improbable, but possible, acci- dental launch of a few ICBMs by any one of the nuclear powers. b. Deployment of Nike-X for Defense of Our Cities Against Soviet Attack, Nothing has Occurred during the last year to change my conviction that the deploy- ment of the Nike-X system for the defense of our cities against a Soviet attack would, under present circumstances, be a futile waste of our resources. I believe it is clear from my earlier discussion of the trends in the nature of the threat, as evaluated by our intelligence community, that the Soviets are determined to maintain a nuclear deterrent against the United States. If this is true, as I believe it is, any attempt on our part to re- duce their "Assured Destruction" capability below what they might consider necessary to deter us would simply cause them to respond with an offsetting increase in their offensive forces. It Is precisely this process of action and reaction upon which the arms race feeds, at great cost to both sides and benefit to neither. This point is illustrated In the table on the following page which is based on nu- clear strike capabilities as they might be viewed by the potential adversaries. NUMBERS OF FATALITIES IN AN ALL-OUT STRATEGIC EXCHANGE, MID 1970's' In millionsl United States strikes first Soviets strike first against at military targets; Soviets military and city targets; retaliate against U.S, cities; United States retaliates United States retaliates against U.S. program Soviet response against cities Soviet cities No ABM ---------------------- None ------------------------ Sentinel ----------------------- None. ----------------------- Pon-Aids --------------------- Posture A--------------------- None ------------------------ MIRV Pen-Aids--------------- Plus f00 mobile ICBM's -------- Posture B--------------------- None -------------- ---------- MIRV Pen-Aids --------------- Plus 550 mobile ICBM's -------- U.S. fatalities Soviet fatalities U.S. Soviet fatalities fatalities 120 120 120 80 100 120 90 80 120 120 110 80 40 120 10 80 110 120 60 80 110 120 90 80 20 120 10 80 70 120 40 80 100 120 90 80 I At fatality levels approximating 100,000,000 or more, differences of 10,000,000 to 20,000,000 in the calculated results are less than the margin of error in the estimates. "Posture A" is a light defense against a Soviet missile attack on our cities. It con- sists of an area defense of the entire con- tinental United States, providing redundant (overlapping) coverage of key target areas, and, in addition, a relatively low-density Sprint defense of 25 cities to provide some protection against those warheads which get through the area defense. "Posture B" is a heavier defense with the same area coverage, but with much greater sophistica- tion in its electronics and a higher-density Sprint defense for 52 cities. Postures A and B would also require some improvement in our defense against manned bomber attack in order to preclude the Soviets from undercutting the ABM de- fense; we would also want to expand and im- prove our anti-submarine warfare forces to help defend against Soviet missile-launching submarines. The "current" estimates of the investment cost of the total "Damage Limit- ing" package are at least $13 billion for Posture A and at least $22 billion for Pos- ture B. On the basis of past experience, how- ever, actual costs would more likely be $40 billion by the time the system had been completed. Cost, however, is not the problem, If we could actually build and deploy a genuinely impenetrable shield over the United States, we would be willing to spend $40 billion. But, if after spending these tens of billions of dollars, we could still expect to find our- selves in a position where a Soviet attack could inflicit unacceptable damage on our population because of their response to our defensive efforts, I do not see how we would have really improved our security or free- dom of action. And neither can I see how the Soviets will have improved their se- curity and freedom of action if after all their additional expenditures for offensive and de- fensive systems, we can still inflicit unac- ceptable damage on them, even after absorb- ing their first strike. For this reason we have come to the conclusion that both sides would be far better off if we can reach an agree- ment on the limitation of all strategic nu- clear forces, including ABMs. In any event, there is no point whatever in our responding to a massive ABM deploy- ment on their part with a massive ABM deployment of our own. Instead, we should not realistically and further strengthen our offensive forces, if and when necessary, to Approved For Release 2004/05/12 CIA-RDP70B00338R000200170119-7 Approved For Release 2004/05/12 : CIA-RDP70B00338R000200170119-7 S7236 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE June 13, 1968 preserve our "Assured Destruction" capa- bility. X. STRATEGIC OFFENSIVE s'oRCES The force atructure proposed for the FY 1969-73 period Is shown on a classified table provided to the Committee. - :. Missile forces In overall terms the missile forces we are proposing for the FY 1969--73 period are essentially the same as those I discussed last year-1,000 Minuteman, 496 Poseidon and 160 Polaris, plus 54 Titan IIS. Within these overall numbers, however, we are proposing some changes in mix and payload. a. Minuteman Last year I told you that In order to in- crease the capability of our offensive forces against a possible strong Soviet ABM defense, we proposed to increase the number of Minuteman IIIs in the force. I also pointed out that by FY 1978-74 it would probably become necessary to replace the earliest Minuteman II missiles, and that we could then add more Minuteman Ills if that should appear desirable. Although the Soviet ABNI deployment is not moving forward as fast as anticipated last year, we now believe it. would be desirable to increase the number of Minuteman IIIs. And, as I indicated earlier, we have included funds in the FY 1969 Budget for the development of dual-purpose super-hard silos for the Minuteman or a new land-based ICBM.Be- cause the development program for the Minuteman III is taking longer than we had planned, and because we want to pursue a more efficient overall Minuteman moderniza- tion schedule, initial deployment of the Minuteman III will slip some months behind the schedule envisioned last year. The phase out of Minuteman I will be slowed down to compensate for the slip in the Minuteman III program. - b. Titan II Although the Titan II will decline in im- portance as the Minuteman III and the Poseidon are deployed, it may be advisable to retain the present force of 54 missiles on launchers. Its heavy payload would be useful against large soft targets which are not de- fended by ABMs. On the basis of a recent re- view of the Titan II follow-on test program, we now believe that four tests per year, in- stead of six, will. be enough to ensure that the missiles in the force are operationally re- liable. Thus, with the procurement of a small number of missiles in FY 1969-70, we can maintain the present force of 54 Titan mis- siles on launchers throughout the program period, instead of allowing it to decline after FY 19'70 as we planned last year. a. Polaris-Poseidon The polaris-Poseidon program is essentially the same as the one I presented here last year. Thirty-one of the 41 Polaris submarines, all of which have now become operational, will be refitted with the Poseidon missile. The other ten (five 598-Class and five 608- Class) cannot be refitted without replacing the center section of their hulls. The cost would be about equal to that of a new sub- marine, and even then they would not be as good as the other 31. Accordingly, these sub- marines will continue to carry the Polaris missile. The five 598-Class ships, which orig- inally carried the A-l, have already been re- fitted with the A-3. The five 608-Class ships, which now carry the A-2, will be refitted with the A-3 during their second overhaul. The proposed FY 1969 shipbuilding and conver- sion program includes funds for six Poseidon conversions and advance procurement for nine more. - d. New Strategic Missile Systems Last year I told you that we are making a comprehensive study of new strategic missile systems. This study was completed last aum- mer, and on the basis of its findings we have included $66 million in the FY 1969 Budget for advanced ICBM technology. < r * s r b. Manned Interceptors The ultimate U.S. manned interceptor force will consist of modified F-106Xs (supported by C-130s which would be used to move ground crews and equipment to the dispersal recycle bases), plus an Air National Guard F-102 squadron In Hawaii. This squadron, together with the search radars, will con- tinue to provide a local air defense capa- bility for that remote state. We plan, to start the phase-down of the interceptor forces in FY 1969. c, Surface-to-Air Missiles On the basis of our present plans, all of the Bomarc force would be phased out when the full F-106X force becomes operational. Most of the Hercules and all of the Hawks. however, will be retained, 2. Missile and space defense The decision to deploy a Chinese-oriented ABM defense system will undoubtedly have an important impact on other strategic de- fensive programs. For example, we already know that the Perimeter Acquisition Radar (PAR) planned for the Sentinel system could also be made to handle some of the long- range acquisition and tracking functions presently performed by the three BMEWS sites. Conversely, the over-the-Horizon (back- soatter) radars planned for the anti-bomber defense could also be used to provide limited detection and tracking of ballistic missiles launched from submarines. Moreover, in order to provide a backup for BMEWS, we have already 'deployed several Over-the- Horizon (forward-scatter) radar transmitters and receivers, and we have under active de- velopment for a number of years a satellite- borne missile warning system which now ap- pears to be capable of providing earlier warn- ing than BMEWS. (The forward-scatter OTH and the satellite-borne missile warning sys- tem are two of the measures I alluded to in my earlier discussion of the Soviet FOBS.) Clearly, the time has come when we must systematically examine all of these warning systems in relation to one another, with a view to eliminating unnecessary redundancy and ensuring that the remaining systems are truly integrated into a workable whole. Ac- cordingly, I have recently asked the Joint Chiefs of Staff to establish a Joint Conti- nental Defense System Integration Planning Staff to study this entire problem in depth, including the function of all defensive sys- tems in a wartime environment. a. Missile Warning Pending the completion of the aforemen- tioned study, we are not proposing any changes in the BMEWS program. However, we are making certain changes in the siting of the Over-the-Horizon (forward-scatter) radar program, These radars have demon- strated a very high order of capability. Al- though originally designed to detect ICBM launches (including FOBS), these radars have demonstrated a good capability to de- tect smaller ballistic missiles. As I indicated earlier, we are developing a back-scatter OTH radar for use in the anti-bomber defense. In this system, echo signals from the target are returned directly to the transmitter, thereby eliminating the need for separate receiver stations, It is also more effective than the forward-scatter sys- tem in locating and tracking vehicles moving through and below the ionosphere, for ex- ample, aircraft or SLBMs. We presently plan to begin installing the first back-scatter OTH radar in the near future. While the chief function of this radar will be research and development, we hope that it will also pro- vide some useful operational data. It will also give us an opportunity to test the hack-scat- ter system in the ICBM warning role. b. Anti-Ballistic Missile Defense (Sentinel,) As previously mentioned, the Sentinel sys- tem will consist of PAR and MISR radars and Spartan and Sprint missiles. The PAR is a low frequency phased-array radar used for long-range surveillance, ac- quisition and tracking. The presently planned characteristics of this radar place its design well within the "state-of-the-art", and for this reason the first PAR can be in- stalled directly at its tactical! site rather than ti a field test site. Its performance can be simulated by an ARPA Altair radar al- ready at Kwajalein, for purposes of the full systems tests. The MSR is a phased-array radar used to control the Sprint and Spartan Intercep- tors. It can perform much the same func- tions as the larger MAR, which is not re- quired in a limited deployment, but on a smaller scale. The MSR was tested at the contractor's plant before being sent to Kwaj- alein, where it is currently being installed for the full systems tests. The MAR, which is the most sophisticated component of the Nike-X system, will remain in an R&D status. A Taemar (a smaller version of the MAR) will be installed at Kwajalein for final de- sign and testing. The Spartan missile, as presently designed, will have three stages and utilize an advanced warhead, and should be able to intercept objects at ranges In excess of several hundred miles and at exoatmospheric altitudes. How- ever, we now plan to make some further improvements in the Spartan to enhance its capability against a Fobs. The Spartan will also be included in the full systems tests planned at Kwajalein. The- Sprint missile is designed to attack incoming warheads after the atmosphere has helped to separate out the accompanying decoys, chaff, etc. The missile is capable of climbing thousands of feet in a few seconds to make intercepts between 5,000 and 100,000 feet at ranges between 15-25 miles. It uses a "pop-up" launch technique In which the missile is ejected from its tube by the gen- eration of gas pressure on the piston upon which it rests. Actual ignition does not take place until after the missile has left the tube. This technique conserves propellant, allows the missile to "get away" sooner and reduces the missile size. Initial flight tests are cur- rently being conducted at the White Sands Missile Range, and beginning in early 1969 the missile will be tested at Kwajalein, where the overall systems tests against actual ICBMs fired from Vanderberg Air Base will be conducted. Although, as stated earlier, ABM systems to protect population centers against large sophisticated attacks do not appear ;practical, we will continue to explore new technical approaches to this objective. The Nike-X development program will be used for this purpose. In addition, we will continue to support a number of other ABM related programs, particularly ARPA's Project Defender. In total, the FY 1969 Budget request in- cludes about $1,232 million for ABM defense: $651 million for the deployment of Sentinel (in addition to $229 million in FY 1968); $313 million for Sentinel development; $165 million for ABM advanced development (Nike-X); and $103 million for Defender, In addition, the AEC's FY 1969 budget includes funds for ABM warhead development and production. c. Anti-Satellite Defense As described in previous years, we have a capability to intercept and destroy hostile satellites within certain ranges. This; capa- bility will be maintained throughout the program period. Spasur and Spacetrack are our satellite tracking and Identification systems in the Norad Spadat system. The Spasur system is designed to give a warning when a new space Approved For Release 2004/05/12 : CIA-RDP70B00338R000200170119-7 Approved For Release 2004/05/12 : CIA-RDP70B00338R000200170119-7 June 23,, 1968 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -SENATE object passes through its field, and the Bpacetrack system detects, tracks and com- putes the orbits of objects in space, Both systems are tied to the North American Air Defense Command. One of the projects that the Joint Con- tinental Defense Systems Integration Plan- ning Staff will undertake is the development of a master plan for the evolution of these two systems. The ever-growing population of space objects and "Junk" that must be iden- tified and tracked means that we will have to make major improvements in these sys- tems in the near future. In the case of the Spacetrack system, we have included funds in the FY 1969 Budget for the modification of the data processing and communications equipment at existing sites and for some new construction at these sites. Any fur- ther improvements or expansion will be de- layed pending a full study of the require- ments for electro-optical sites in addition to the camera and radar sites, the links with the Sentinel system, the need for a sepa- rate data processing center, etc. G, CIVIL DEFENSE The Civil Defense program proposed for FY 1969 contemplates no Important change in basic objectives from those which I dis- cussed last year. However, we have held the FY 1969 program to the lowest possible sus- taining rate, pending the end of the Viet- nam conflict. The major objective of the Civil Defense program since 1961 has been the establish- ment of a comprehensive nation-wide shel- ter system to help protect our population from radiological fallout in the event of a nuclear attack. Most of this shelter is in- herent in existing buildings but needs to be identified, marked and stocked with sur- vival supplies before it can be considered truly useful. By the end of the current fiscal year we expect to have identified about 170 million spaces with a standard protection factor of 40 or more, of which about 101 mil- lion will have been marked and 55 million stocked with an average 14 days of supplies. Total shelter capacity should continue to grow in the future as a result of the con- tinixing survey and design assistance efforts being conducted as part of the Civil Defense program. In total, we can probably expect an additional 55 million spaces from these sources over the next five years. DEPLOYMENT OF AN ANTI-BALLISTIC-MISSILE SYSTEM: ISSUES-SELECTED ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY (By Nancy T. Gamarra, analyst in national security, Foreign Affairs Division, June 10, 1968, the Library of Congress Legislative Reference Service) PERIODICALS AND SPEECHES Address by Honorable Robert S. McNamara, Secretary of Defense, before United Press In- ternational Editors and Publishers, San Fran- cisco, California, September 18, 1967. Depart- ment of Defense news release no. 868-67, Sept. 18, 1967. 25 p. Speech in which Secre- tary McNamara announced U.S. decision to deploy a thin ABM system and outlined rea- sons for this decision. Ashworth, George W. Sea-missile key to U.S. defense? Christian Science Monitor, July 22, 1967: 11. Discusses the concept of a sea- borne ABM Intercept system. Baldwin, Hanson W. Military concern on lack of missile defense grows. New York Times, May 21, 1967: 1, 16. "The continuing development by the Soviet Union and Com- munist China of strategic missile systems is causing mounting concern among top mili- tary officers in the Pentagon," Beecher, William. Soviet reported stressing multiple-warhead missile. New York Times, Sept. 10, 1967: 1, 18. It is reported that the Soviet Union is developing multiple warheads for its missiles that "could increase several- fold its ability to hit a number of targets in the United States simultaneously." Bird, David. Nuclear scientists disagree on missile defense, New York Times, Nov. 15, 1967: 24. Nuclear scientists disagree on whether an anti-ballistic missile system will halt or escalate arms race. Bottome, Edgar M. Mythology of the A.B.M. Commonweal, Oct. 20, 1967: 74-76. Author argues that deployment of an ABM system by the United States will not add to nation's security because it will result in further es- calation of the arms race between the United States'and the Soviet Union. Brennan, D. G. New thoughts on missile defense. Bulletin of the atomic scientists, June 1967: 10-15. . there are impor- tant possibilities in which BMD [Ballistic Missile Defense] could play a constructive role, possibilities that support the traditional arms control objective of mitigating the con- sequences of war if it occurs, without con- flicting with the objectives of reducing the likelihood of war and reducing the burdens of the arms race. These possibilities have not been much discussed in the arms control community, quarters which have tended to be surprisingly hostile to any suggestion of deploying BMD." Brown, Neville. Unreason in strategy. New scientist, Oct. 1967: 746-747. "It can be shown that there is little evidence for the idea that national strategic and defense planning is governed by reason. Many recent defense un- dertakings, including anti-missile missiles, are based on ignorance and prejudice." Bussey, Donald S. Deployment of the anti- ballistic missile (ABM) : the pros and cons. Legislative Reference Service, Library of Con- gress, April 19, 1967. 43 p. Discusses ABM and the risk of nuclear war; ABM and damage limitation; and ABM and foreign policy. Critics claim "thin" ABM not enough. Armed forces management, Oct. 1967: 21. The joint Chiefs of Staff "is willing to accept the 'thin' nationwide deployment only if it is a first step toward providing protection to the 25 most heavily populated cities in this country." - Crosby, Col. H. Ashton, The case for anti- ballistic missiles. United States Naval Insti- tute proceedings, July 1967: 2T-31. The au- thor does not believe that the arguments which have been raised against deployment of an ABM system are valid and states his objections to these arguments. Finney, John W. X-ray missile to be key in defense against China. New York Times, Nov. 16, 1967: 1, 22. The Atomic Energy Commis- sion is reported to be "making significant progress in developing a radically new nu- clear X-ray warhead that would be a vital element in the Sentinel ballistic missile de- fense system being erected against Commu- nist China." Finney, John W. G,O.P. group says 'thin' missile net could split NATO. New York times, Nov. 6, 1967: 1, 16. The U.S. decision to deploy an ABM system could rupture NATO and drive Europeans into position of "defensive neutrality." FOBS, ABM and arms control. Survival, Jan 1968: 10-i1. "At the root of much of the criticism of ballistic missile defence for the United States has been the fear of a new strategic arms race. The recent announce- ment of the probable Soviet development of a 'fractional orbital bombardment system' (FOBS) has increased this fear, and the .. , article analyzes some of the arguments be- ing used in the debate in the United States." Frank, Lewis A. The ABM debate. Military review, May 1967: 45-52. "On balance, it would seem that the U.S. deployment of at least a light or anti-Chinese ABM system is justified by both the technical progress re- cently achieved in the design of such sys- tems, by the need to_ know more about its performance utilizing the actual hardware, and by the necessity to provide active de- S7237 Tenses against the growing Soviet and the emergent Chinese nuclear threats to be ex- pected within the coming decade." Gilpatric, Roswell L. The brink of another arms race? New York times magazine, Jan. 15, 1967. Because of the Soviet offensive and defensive buildup the United States is faced with the possibility of a stepped-up arms race with the Soviet Union, Johnston, Lt. Douglas M., Jr. ABM: the high cost of living. United States Naval In- stitute proceedings, Oct. 1967: 26-38. "Man- kind's most basic, and most frequently threatened, right-the right to live-is menaced today as never before. A defensive system against enemy nuclear missiles will be enormously expensive and it will not bar our doors completely: but it will raise the price of admission." Hamilton, Thomas J. U.S. says Nike net will spur atom pact. New York times, Sept. 20, 1967: 1, 18. U.S. officials at the Geneva Disarmament Conference claim that the "de- cision to establish an anti-ballistic missile network against Chinese Communist attack should improve the prospects for the pro- posed treaty to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons." Kleiman, Robert. MIRV and the offensive missile race. New York times, Oct. 9, 1967: 46. "Pressure from Congress and the Joint Chiefs of Staff for a heavy antiballistic-mis- sile (ABM) system oriented to defense against Soviet attack reflects an old military weak- ness: preparing to fight the last year." Lall, Betty Goetz. Congress debates the ABM. Bulletin of the atomic scientists, Sept. 1967: 28-33. "On the ABM question . , . the pattern of Congressional interest shows some usual and unusual aspects ... They (Con- gressmen) are pondering many of the con- sequences of a decision to deploy or not to deploy. There is no panic and little oratory. They do not pretend to have pat solutions to the problem and clearly most would like to be confronted with a case of successful diplo- macy to avoid a commitment to deploy." Lyons, Thomas C., Jr. Anti-missile defense systems. Editorial research reports, vol. 1, no. 7, Feb. 15, 1967: 123-139, Article discusses the following topics: Current Debate on Anti- Missile Systems; Development of the Missile Competition; and American Missiles and Na- tional Security. Martin, Laurence W. Ballistic missile de- fense and Europe. Bulletin of the atomic scientists, May 1967: 42-46. "West Europeans have two interests in the prospects for ABM. Being deeply affected by the state of U.S.- U.S.S.R. relations, United States' allies have a direct interest in all the arguments con- cerning the wisdom of ABM from a strictly U.S. point of view . . , As Europeans, however, they also perceive certain special implications for themselves." The missile defense question: is LBJ right?: a background report. Washington, D.C. Re- publican National Committee, Feb. 20, 1967. 55 p. "Great responsibilities rest on those who must make the decisions regarding our defense against a nuclear threat. It is in an effort to help these persons, by providing them with available information, that the material in this booklet has been assembled" Missile defense: LBJ's bid to curb arms race gains support. Science March 31, 1967: 1651-1654. ".. President Johnson's proposal that U.S. and Soviet negotiators seek an agreement to refrain from, or limit, deploy- ment of antimissile missiles thus far has considerable bipartisan support on Capitol Hill." Morris, John D. Senators call Nike plan a step to full defense. New York Times, Sept. 17, 1967: 2. "The Administration's decision to deploy a limited missile defense around the country was viewed by some Senators as the first step toward establishment of a full-scale system that would cost $7- billion to $15-billion." Approved For Release 2004/05/12 CIA-RDP70B00338R000200170119-7 S 7238 Approved for Release 2004/05/12 : CIA-RDP70B00338R000200170119-7 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE June 13, 1969 Norman, Lloyd. Nike-X: big chip in the deadly gamble of nuclear exchange. Army, March 1967: 25--33. ". , . the shifting balance of nuclear killing power between the United States and the Soviet Union sets of a series of moves and countermoves in the ancient game of offense-versus-defense. The game is played on no simple checkerboard, but on one that resembles the tangled -maze of wir- ing In an electronic game with its Interplay- ing factors of psychology, military power, international politics, and national doc- trines- Pay, Rex. U.S. ABM would imperil test ban treaty. Technology week, March 20, 1967: 14- 15. "A decision by the United States to deploy an, operational anti-ballistic missile (ABM) system would probably require the resump- tion of atmospheric nuclear testing by this Country, according to some high-level weap- ons experts." Rabinowoitch, Eugene and Ruth Adams, eds. Debate the antiballistic missile. Chicago, Illinois, Bulletin of the atomic scientists, 1967. 172 p. (Collection of articles on ABM.) "The layman must respect the creative in- telligence which went into the development of the ABM system; but this appreciation is entirely apart from the process and privilege of decislonmaking, which need not remain behind closed doors. The subject is one of the most important questions before this nation. ABM is an open-ended armament program, of incalculable importance for our future and for the future of the world." Rodberg, Leonard S. ABM-some arms con- trol issues. Bulletin of the atomic scientists, June 1967: 16-20. "The deployment of ABM systems will not only postpone the day when we can look elsewhere than to nuclear weap- ons for the key to national power, but it will also place greater emphasis upon the possi- bility of nuclear war, the role of nuclear weapons in providing a defense, and the value to a country of nuclear independence." .Schmidt, Dana Adams. Kosygin is owl to missiles curb. New York times, Feb. 10, 1967: .1, 6. Soviet Premier Kosygln is reported to have said that defensive ABM systems were less dangerous to mankind than offensive systems. - Strategic defense: what the ABM deploy- ment means. Armed forces management. April 1968: 71-74, Outlines the reasons for the Defense,_Department's decision to deploy an ABM system and the limitations and drawbacks of ABM deployment. Thurmond, Senator Strom. ABM: lessening the threat of nuclear blackmail. Data, Oct. 1967: 10-11.. Argues that the United States "will not be as susceptible to nuclear black- mail or Soviet miscalculation" since the de- *Won has been made to deploy a U.S. ABM system. ' U.S. missile plans criticized in Bonn. New York Times, Oct, 28, 1967: 11. A West Ger- man official says that U.S. plans to deploy an ABM system would erode the Western Alliance. Weisner, Jerome B. The case against an antiballistic missile system. Look, Nov. 28, 1967: 25-27. Author does not believe that a "really effective antimissile system is re- motely possible for either the U.S. or the Russians." Weisner, Jerome B. The cold war is dead, but the arms race rumbles on. Bulletin of the atomic scientists, June 1967: 6-9. ". . , If the ABM systems are built, there will cer- tainly be further large increases in military expenditures for new and more sophisticated weapons as both sides jockey to maintain a credible deterrent to try to protect their citizens from the horrors of nuclear war." Young, Elizabeth, ABM: no alternative to politics. Bulletin of the atomic scientists, June 1967: 47-49. "The only reason for U.S. deployment [of an ABM system] seems to be the fact that the Soviet government is deploying It-and the U.S. government can- not refuse to give their people a defense that the Soviets have." But the author argues that sophisticated military power can no longer solve the world's disagreements. Young, Oran R. Active defense and inter- national order. Bulletin of the Atomic Scien- tists, May 1967: 35-42. Author "analyzes the consequences that would result from alterna- tive patterns of ABM deployment," CONGRESSIONAL DOCUMENTS U.S. Congress. Joint Committee on Atomic Energy. Hearings: Scope, Magnitude and Im- plications of the United States Antiballistic Missile Program. 90th Congress, 1st session, 1967. 153 p. Hearings "review the plans and programs relating to our ABM program in the context of three recent developments": the Soviet offensive buildup, the Soviet defen- sive buildup, and the emergence of China as a nuclear power. Testimony isgiven by Dr. John S. Foster, Jr., Director of Defense Research and Engi- neering; Alice Langley Hsieh, Rand Corp.; Dr. Philip E. Mosely, Professor of Interna- tional Relations and Director of the European Institute, Columbia University; Paul H. Nitze, Deputy Secretary of Defense; and Thomas Wolfe, Rand Corp., and member of the Sino- Soviet Institute, George Washington Uni- versity. U.S. Congress. Senate. Committee on Ap- propriations. Subcommittee on, Department of Defense; and Committee on Armed Serv- ices. Hearings on Military Authorizations and Defense Appropriations for Fiscal Year 1968. 90th Congress, 1st Session, 1967. Part I. Testimony of Secretary of Defense McNa- mara, pp. 44-61; 231-241; 260-269. Testimony of Gen, Earle G. Wheeler, Chairman of Joint Chiefs of Staff, pp. 249-252. U.S. Congress. Senate. Committee on Armed Services. Statement by Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara on the Fiscal Year 1969-73 Defense Program and 1969 Defense Budget. Prepared January 22, 1968, pp. 41-69, 74-75. Statement of Defense Department policy with respect to the deployment of an ABM system. ExHIDrr 3 STATEMENT OF DR. JOHN S. FOSTER, JR., DraEC- TOR OF DEFENSE RESEARCH AND ENGINEERING I am pleased to be here today. I understand that you have requested a discussion of the technical status of the U.S. ballistic missile defense program. In discussing the general subject, let me first say that every system we have ever seri- ously considered for deployment involves the use of radars to detect and track the incom- ing targets, and the use of these same or dif- ferent radars to guide ground-to-air inter- ceptor missiles to the vicinity of the targets. There a command from the ground causes the interceptor warhead to detonate and de- stroy the target. It Is clear that such a de- fense system does not provide a shield which makes a nation impervious to attack, since the interceptors can always be avoided or outnumbered-provided always that the ene- my is willing to pay the price In decreased fatalities or increased cost to his offensive effort. In reviewing the history of ballistic mis- sile defense over the past 10 years, it seems there has always been controversy over its value or lack of value. Of course, if the de- fense had been a true shield, there would have been no controversy, and we would have made a deployment decision long ago. The first controversy arose around the question, "Could a bullet hit a bullet?" This phase passed, first when calculations showed the feasibility of such an intercept and later and most definitely when successful inter- cepts of actual ICBM targets fired from Van- denberg Air Force Base were accomplished by the old Nike-Zeus system in 1962-63. We had 10 out of 14 successful intercepts. After this "simple" problem was solved, it was realized that the offense would replace the relatively easy-to-intercept single war- head with clouds of objects, or take other deceptive measures. Examples of these ob- jects were decoys designed to look like war- heads to the radar, and chaff designed to conceal the warhead in a cloud of light ob- jects. Against those more sophisticated tar- gets there was a necessity for the defense to discriminate among them so as to know which objects to take under fire. Hence many objects might have to be tracked and ob- served simultaneously. Also, it might be nec- essary for the defense to wait for atmospheric reentry of the targets and rely on slowdown and burnup of the lighter objects before this discrimination could be accomplished. The old Nike-Zeus system, when con- frgnted with these more sophisticated tar- gets, had two fatal defects. One was that it used what are now considered to be old- fashioned mechanical radars, which had to be mechanically clewed or pointed at each target in turn-a matter of seconds. One practically had to have a radar for each target. And the Zeus missile could not be delayed in firing until atmospheric reentry of the targets took place, because it was too slow- Hence discrimination could not be aided by atmospheric filtering. Because of these defects, the Nike X con- cept was born. First, the mechanical radars of Nike-Zeus were replaced by phased array radars, which by varying the electrical phase of the power over the face of a fixed antenna array could change the direction of the radar beam in a matter of microseconds. This imparted a capability of tracking many objects simultaneously, and thus removed one of the Zeus defects. Second, a very high- performance, short-range-interceptor missile, the Sprint, was introduced. It was smaller, cheaper, and had - much higher acceleration than Zeus, and thus could afford to wait until reentry of the targets before being committed to fire, Atmospheric filtering was now feasible and the remaining targets could be attacked with the high firepower Sprints. The old Zeus interceptor was retained in the system for long-range attacks on simple targets. We now had two interceptors-the Zeus and the Sprint. The Nike X development, Initiated In 1963, was thus much more effective than the old Zeus system. It must be noted, however, that it was essentially a "terminal defense" sys- tem. The Sprint could only defend cities or selected sites. Hence, since it is obviously impractical to deploy terminal defenses , at every small city or village in the United States, it was subject to bypass attack. An enemy could always target the undefended cities and obtain high casualties, This option was available even to unsophisticated oppo- nents. The sophisticated opponent, by con- centrating his firepower, could overwhelm the defense at any selected defended site. The value of ballistic missile defense was therefore questioned. The next important development in de- fense effectiveness came with the introduc- tion of "area defense" in the period 1964-- 65. I would like to define the term "area defense." The detection sensor is the perimeter ac- quisition radar (PAR) which detects ballis- tic missiles at long ranges. The PAR radar tracks the Incoming missile and predicts its future path. To intercept the incoming missile, we employ the Spartan missile which is a long-range interceptor developed from the old Nike-Zeus. Once the PAR radar has predicted the future path of the missile a Spartan missile is fired so as to intercept it. This interceptor intercepts the incoming missile well above the atmosphere. Because of its long range the Spartan can intercept incoming missiles directed at targets several hundred miles from the Spartan battery lo- cation. The Spartan missile is guided by a missile site radar (MSR) which is associated with each battery. Approved For Release 2004/05/12 : CIA-RDP70B00338R000200170119-7 une 73, 1968 Approved fe/DP$EQ''R000200170119-7 S 7239 with the Introduction of Spartan, the some of their own earlier estimates. He phase of the system and the arguments Zeus Interceptor was no longer required- points out the danger of being leap- for it and the arguments against it. For in effect, the Spartan' replaced the Zeus. frogged technologically on an important that reason, I had said I would place in from sim le d St it p ates e defend the whole un attacks. You will note I said "simple attacks." It is still possible for a sophisticated opponent to' confuse the defense and make the fire- power demands on Spartan too high. In this case, terminal defense Sprints must be relied upod if we are to furnish a defense. The Spar- tan thus functions in two ways. It can pro- vide a very effective defense over extended areas against simple threats. Against not so simple threats, it provides a defense in depth and is complementary to Sprint. In any case it forces the enemy, if he wishes to penetrate, to pay the price demanded by a sophisticated penetration aids program. You will note that I have described a flex- ible set of building blocks consisting of PAR and MSR radars and two types of in- terceptor missiles, Spartan and Sprint. We also have a very large, sophisticated radar called TACMAR, designed specifically against sophisticated attacks. They can be put together in various ways to provide vary- ing levels of defense against different threats. For example, if we wished to defend the United States against a large Soviet at- tack, we would provide an overlay of an area defense such as I have described. As I men- tioned earlier, however,' it would be neces- sary to depend primarily on terminal Sprint defense, including TACMARs, at -selected. cities. A selected city defense (including the area coinponent) would cost about $10-or $20 billion depending on the number of cities defended. As a matter of technical judgment, I be- lieve that these larger' deployments - carry with them technical risks. The likelihood of large and sophisticated attacks with the deployment of significant U.S. defenses in- creases the technical uncertainty of the defensive system. Even with an ABM deploy- ment we would have to .expect that in an all-out exchange, dozens of their warheads would likely explode in our cities. Mr. JAVITS. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. COOPER.I yield. Mr. JAVITS. I congratulate the Sena- tor for his remarks today, for the follow- Ing reasons: First, he is not accepting as sacrosanct a decision which has been taken by alleged authorities in the execu- tive branch. One of the most significant developments in recent months here in the Senate, in my judgment is that we are no longer willing to accept blindly even what the Senate Committee on Armed Services brings in with respect to fundamental Issues of national security. This is a big step forward. There is too much involved, in peace, security,. and competing financial considerations, to justify any continuance of what was al- most a tradition of accepting anything proposed by the administration and ap- proved by the Armed Services Committee. Second, the Senator is taking nothing for granted. It appears to many of us that the "thin" ABM was agreed to give partial satisfaction to those power elements of the Military Establishment- and their champions in Congress and elsewhere-who wanted a full scale heavy ABM system directed against the U.S.S.R. Next, he challenges some of the in- telligence assumptions upon which all of this is based. As the Senator has said, our intelligence experts have changed launched, we might have to continue for a long time, without being able to change direction or take full advantage of sub- sequent technological breakthroughs. It was well for our colleague to have dealt with this subject as thoughtfully as he has today. I shall study his sug- gestions concerning appropriations cuts on deployment items with a view to see- ing whether I can join with him in his proposed amendments. I appreciate his having laid it out to stimulate my think- ing and, I hope, the thinking of other Senators. Mr. COOPER. I thank the Senator. It was my purpose to present my views that I arrived at on the basis of the study I have been able to make. I know the intellectual powers and the judgment with which the Senator from New York will study this matter. .Whatever conclu- sion he comes to I know will be based on judgment, reason, and facts, and not just on emotional feelings, as strongly as they appeal to all of us to want to do everything possible to protect the secu- rity of the United States. The question is, Will it protect the security of the United States? . The more I have read the testimony of those who have testified in favor of the system, the more I found that there are so many contradictions. All the propo- . nents admit that the installation of the system will lead to a greater pressure to produce more defensive weapons which can cope with any system which could be installed. Mr. JAVITS. I thank the Senator. Mr. CASE. Mr. President, will the Senator yield?' Mr. COOPER. I yield. Mr. CASE. I, too, commend the Sen- ator and, in my case, join with him at least as far as he has reached his own determination in opposition to the anti- ballistic missile system, both the large system which is not being immediately projected and the so-called thin system. It seems to me the Senator has pointed out many things that needed to be said, and he has correctly posed the issue as this: Will what Is proposed add to or lessen the security of the United States? Will it increase or decrease the possible destruction of human life? In this connection I would put to the Senator a specific argument by, I think, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in some testimony I have read or heard, to the general effect that an antiballistic missile system might save the lives of some 30 million to 60 million Americans, and would it not be worth putting into effect for that reason, even if hundreds of millions of people were killed? This is not a precise statement of the argu- ment, but it is the substance of it. There is, I know, in the Senator's mind, a very specific answer to this argu- ment. He has answered It already, in fact, in the way he has made his state- ment, but I wonder if he would comment on that specific point. Mr. COOPER. I did not discuss in de- tail, in the limited time I had, every retary Mc.ivamara on snis_suolecu. tt, 16 not too long. It gives very concisely the facts as far as we understand them on the question which the Senator has raised. It is one which we have discussed, and one which has bothered me and to which I have given much thought. I think the testimony is clear that the installation of a heavy ABM system to try to meet a Soviet attack would do little to save human life, because, if the So- viet Union made a first strike, with or without an ABM system, millions and millions of our people would be de- stroyed. I do not think it would have any effect at all upon the ABM system. There is, however, a table in this testi- mony which deals with estimated U.S. fatalities from a possible Chinese first strike. It is stated that if. seven or eight Chinese intercontinental ballistic mis- siles were launched against the United States, without a Sentinel system, 15 million American lives would be lost; and that with the Sentinel system,, the loss of .life might be held down to 1 million. That is, in my view, the strongest argument and the only argument for the installation of this system. But against that, there is certainly some elementary reasoning. By 1974 or 1975, when the Chinese might be able to fire seven or eight intercontinental balilstic missiles at the United States, knowing that the United States has to- day 1,710 missiles and, of course, will be producing more; and realizing the effectiveness of those missiles, which number will be tripled or, perhaps mul- tiplied by 10, when MIRV is introduced. I do not know how irresponsible we think the Chinese are; but it would be hard for me to believe that they'would fire 10 missiles at the United States, knowing they would as a result be liter- ally wiped off the face of the earth. Then, if we have installed this ABM system, and the Soviet Union begins to worry about our installation of the sys- tem, it would, in turn, ofcourse, install one. We would then respond and install a heavier one, and nothing would be ac- complished as far as our protection against the Soviet Union or their protec- tion against us is concerned, except a multiplication of arms. Mr. CASE. And the point, of course, as the Senator has just pointed out, is that the risk of the loss of life will be much greater, in total, because we will not be dealing with a static situation, one which we can keep within our control, which will stop developing when we build our light system. Therefore, it is not only a question of possibly saving 15 million American lives, or whatever the number from a Chinese first strike, but of the danger to 200 mil- lion Americans and hundreds of millions of others in other countries, which will be so much greater from the accelerated development in numbers and types of missiles all over the world, and partic- ularly vis-a-vis the Soviet Union. Approved For Release 2004/05/12 : CIA-RDP70B00338R000200170119-7 S 7240 Approved For Re 1 C B0 R 0200170119-7 AZ June 13; 196q Mr. COOPER. I think so. There again, I ask unanimous consent to have I refer to Secretary McNamara, who was printed in the RECORD the article en- speaking to the committee upon the basis titled "ABM Project Due To Bear Brunt of hard intelligence. of Cuts, Sparing Great Society," written He admitted that after this so-called by Rowland Evans and Robert Novak, thin system is installed, one which he and published in the Washington Post believed would be sufficient or effective in of June 13, 1968. the middle 1970's, then the Chinese could There being no objection, the article improve their intercontintental ballistic was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, missiles, and then the United Mates as follows: would have to extend its thin system and make it a heavier system even to keep up with the growing destructive capa- bilities of the Chinese. Of course, } that would inexorably move into the coin plete system which it is said by some would protect us against a Soviet attack. . Mr. CASE. One further question, if the Senator will yield. Mr. COOPER. Yes. Mr. CASE. Is it not the Senator's un- derstanding, as it is mine, that the top scientific advisers to the executive de- partment for the last several adn#iiiis- trations have unanimously agreed in ad- vising against the deployment of either a full or a light antiballistic missile sys- tem? ? Mr. COOPER. I have been so informed, and I have heard at least one of those advisers say that all those who had been the principal scientific advisers of Presi- dent Eisenhower, President Kennedy, and President Johnson had advised against taking this step of deploying an antiballistic missile system. I am sure that is the Senator's information also. Mr. CASE. That has been my experi- ence also. In fact, two of them have spo- ken to me in those terms. , I thank the Senator from Kentucky. I commend him for his statement, and wholeheartedly join him in it. Mr. COOPER. Mr. President, I yield the floor. Mr. THURMOND. Mr. President, dur- ing the past few days we have been hear- Ing Wi increasing number of rumors about the methods that would be em- ployed by the President to effect a $6 billion reduction in the fiscal year,1969 budget. This reduction is the required trade off that the Congress imposed last month in return for enacting legislation to authorize a 10-percent surtax. Recently, I heard from a good author- ity that there is an unannounced ad- ministrative policy decision to take the bulk 'of the $6 billion cut out of expendi- tures for defense. Moreover, it Is well known that military authorities in the Pentagon are now reviewing their re- quirements in an effort to reduce the budget. In this regard, it has come to my attention that large hardware items are particularly vulnerable for reduction, and that the Army's Sentinel project- the "thin" ABM defense-is a certain target. In that connection, today's issue of the Washington Post carries a columi by Evans and Novak entitled "ABM Project Due To Bear Brunt of Cuts, Sparing Great Society." We are all familiar ,pith the administration's policy of "leaking" news on controversial subjects to, the newspapers as trial balloons to sample public opinion. This is an apparent case, and I think that it is important to flush the issue out of the conjecture stage and into the open for a clear scrutiny. ABM PROJECT DUE To BEAR BRUNT OF CUTS, SPARING GREAT SOCIETY (By Rowland Evans and Robert Novak) A still undisclosed scheme to eliminate all new money for the embryonic anti-ballistic missile (ABM) system is the first dramatic step of President Johnson's grand strategy for complying with congressional economy strictures without cutting Into Great Society spending. The opening wedge of that strategy is an amendment to the Defense Appropriations bill that Sen. Philip A. Hart of Michigan plans to offer, eliminating the entire $1.2- billion appropriation for the ABM Sentinel project. That would result In an estimated half-billion-dollar cut in spending for the new fiscal year (starting July 1). What makes this a significant move inthe tortuous game of budget-cutting between Congress and the White House is the origin of the ABM ripper amendment. It was scarce- ly Phil Hart's own idea. Rather, the White House asked Hart, a dependable Administra- tion wheelhorse, to put in the amendment when the defense money bill reaches the Sen- ate floor in late June. Moreover, the President's effective post- ponement of the Sentinel ABM program is but one part of his undedlared policy to take the bulk of the 6-billion reduction in expen- ditures out of defense. Because of this deci- sion, word has been passing in the highest levels of the Administration that Great So- ciety and other social welfare programs will not be further reduced to make up the $6 billion. From the moment that Mr. Johnson an- nounced on June r that he would most reluc- tantly accept the congressional mandate for $6 billion in spending cuts to get $10 billion in higher taxes, his top budgetary experts have been looking around for ways to in- sulate the Great Society. Examining and dis- carding numerous gimmicks to circumvent the congressional edict, they glumly decided that the congressional order to cut $6 billion was ironclad. From that conclusion flowed the unan- nounced policy decision to cut into an al- ready pared-down Pentagon budget to satisfy congressional demands. Of the $4 billion in spending reductions that the President originally insisted would be the maximum he would accept, $2 billion was to have come out of the Pentagon-a figure, it was then said, that could go no higher. Now, however, the defense cut will be at least $3 billion and possibly more. The rest of the spending cut will come out of foreign aid, space, and other non-social wel- fare items, according to present plans. Consequently, Pentagon staffers have been working overtime in recent days to find addi- tional sources for reducing their budget. There are not many. For Instance, a further reduction of U.S. troops in Europe, while winning hurrahs on Capitol Hill, wouldn't make much impact on the current spending budget. That leaves big hardware items: the manned orbiting laboratory and, more im- portant, the Sentinel project, which always has had more- than its rhare of enemies in- side the Pentagon. But Mr. Johnson did not wait for the Pentagon's considered judgment. Instead, he decided on the Hart ploy. Hart tried to keep his proposal a secret, at least until the Senate Appropriations Committee finished work on the defense money bill-perhaps today. Whether he then planned to surface it overtly as a White House proposal or to disguise it as his own, is not known. in any event, Hart and the White House have one hard argument on their side: The Chinese intercontinental missile, which the Sentinel is supposed to guard agW.nst, is now some nine months overdue. Furthermore, all the elements of political gamesmanship will be on Mr. Johnson's side. He will be asking the ecenomy-minded Con- gress to cut an item put into the budget partly because of pressure from conservatives in the House. If Congress refused, he could still impound the funds and point to con- gressional refusal to cut spending when it really counted. Nor is there must of a popular constituency today lobbying for anti-missile systems, whatever their importance to the country's survival may be. The pressure, rather, is for no further cuts in Great Society spending, and that is what Mr. Johnson also is bent on avoiding. Mr. THURMOND. Mr. President, my colleagues will note that the Evans and Novak article predicts that an amend- ment eliminating the entire $1.2 billion for the Sentinel antiballistic missile project will be introduced. Today the distinguished Senator from Kentucky has stated that he expected to Offer such an amendment. I have also heard it rumored that the distinguished Senator from Michigan [Mr. HART] might offer such an amendment. This possibility re- minds me of Senate action taken on April 18 when S. 3293-appropriations for procurement of missiles, aircraft, naval vessels, tracked combat vehicles, and research and development-was acted upon. My colleagues will remem- ber two separate attempts to block work on the Sentinel system. The first attempt was an amendment to drop $342.7 million for the Sentinel from the Army's procurement funds. This was rejected by a 174o-41 rollcall vote. The second attempt was an amend- ment to prohibit deployment of an ABM system until the Secretary od.' Defense certified that it was practicable and that its cost was known with reasonable ac- curacy. This amendment was defeated by a very close vote of 28 to 31. It is apparent from the action of last April, that many of-my colleagues were, at that time, ready to delaythe deploy- ment of the Sentinel system sacrificing the prompt installation of this sorely needed vital defense system on the altar of economy. In my opinion, the climate of protest now so evident in the Nation's Capital might serve to Influence even more Senators to vote against the ABM when the defense appropriations bill comes up for approval. In an effort to emphasize the importance of the Senti- nel system, and to forestall any pre- cipitous action that might result in an impetus wave of economy, I should like to discuss the need for ABM defense of this country in some detail. The U.S. ABM system has been under development for more than 10 years. It was only through the pressure of the Congress that the administration finally dropped the foot-dragging policy that had caused delay after delay in the au- thorization of the deployment of the antiballistic missile defense system. Senators will recall this long and tor- tuous fight from the following summary: Approved For Release 2004/05/12 : CIA-RDP70B00338R000200170119-7 June 13, 1968 Approved F~roR$&ggS? #~f/1 ' -BDP R BR000200170119-7 S7241 res5 pro- THE DEPLOYMENT OF NIKE-SENTINEL launching could not be delayed until at- reentry of the targets took place, he n C i Mid-1950 s. Each year O g Finn Larsen) mosp vided funds for ABM research and de- (Address by Dr. because it accelerated too slowly to possibly velopment. By 1967, a total of $2.8 billion On September 18 the Secretary of Defense reach its incoming target in time. Hence had been spent on Nike-Zeus and announced that a decision had been made discrimination could not - be aided by at- to deploy throughout the United States an mospheric filtering. Nike-X. Anti-Ballistic Missile System. In light of the At about the time these defects were recog- 1963. In the first secret session of the interest that this decision has engendered I nizd, three developments were reaching the Senate since World War II, Senators welcome the opportunity to speak to you on point where their application might aver- were briefed on our strategic posture and this subject. come shortcomings in the Zeus system. First, were warned that the Soviets had a The original need to provide a defense by the early 1960's phased array radar tech- prototype ABM system. The Senate against ballistic missiles came in the 1940's nology, with its instantaneous electronic Armed Services Committee added an with the introduction of the German V-2 beam steering, was demonstrating that it amendment to the annual procurement short-range ballistic rocket, and the experi- could overcome the low traffic handling weapon confirmed War II with One radar could now track hundreds of ob- ill authorizing appropriation of $196 class of subsequent parts. to the instigation of procurement he ad minis- ABM a defense. By the middle 60's the potential jects in space simultaneously. Second, new, parts. - parts. At the instigation of the struck threat to the United States had become seri- large computers provided vastly improved tration, this amendment was struck on ous because of the extension of missile ranges data processing technology which enable an a roilcall vote-58 to 16. to intercontinental distances. The threat pre- ABM system to handle the increased informa- 1966. At the insistence of the Senate sented by the ICBM is unique because of tion provided by the improved radars. And, Armed Services Committee, Congress the ICBM's speed and thermonuclear war- lastly, a small, very high acceleration missile approved $167.9 million for ABM pro- ICBM can a elng at four milesin Seco d, an wesdconceiv d which, becau enemy as ee , for these sand did not not compared to the hours previously required had penetrated the atmosphere and the at- curement. asked for these funds and did not use by enemy bombers. For almost a decade the mosphere had filtered the heavy objects, like them. ICBM was considered by many to be a weapon warheads, from the lighter objects such as November 10, 1966. McNamara an- against which defense was impossible. decoys, chaff, etc. This new missile was nounced that the Soviets had begun de- Every ABM system we have ever seriously named SPRINT, and the new concept was ployment of an ABM system around considered for deployment involves the use called Nike-X. In January of 1963 the Secre- Moscow. of radars to detect and track the incoming tary of Defense directed the Army to pursue January 1967. President Johnson stated targets, and the use of these same or differ- Nike-X as its highest priority development effort. that no deployment of a U.S. ABM ent radars to guide ground-to-air interceptor system would be made until completion missiles in the vicinity of the targets. At the In spite of these quite significant develop- of the arms control negotiations with point of nearest approach to the ICBM, a ments, it was not, yet time to deploy an command from the ground causes the inter- ABM system, for at best what we had was Russia. Secretary McNamara's military cepting warhead to detonate and destroy the a terminal defense, one which could only posture report to the Congress contained target. It is clear that such a defense system defend the city or installation near which a lengthy_ argument against' deployment does not provide a shield which makes a na- it was deployed. It was not until the intro- of a complete, Russian-oriented ABM tion impervious to attack, since the inter- duction of a long range missile called Spar- system. He stated that it would be waste- ceptors can many times be outnumbered- tan that an area defense became possible. ful and ineffective, and it would disturb provided always that the enemy is willing to With a high yield warhead and the ability the strategic balance. Two days later, pay the price of decreased fatalities or in- to reach hundreds of miles into space, Spar- Gen. Earle Wheeler, Chairman of the creased cost to his offensive effort. tan missiles may be deployed at relatively Joint Chiefs of Staff, disagreed with the In reviewing the history of ballistic missile few (15-20) locations in the United States defense over the past ten years, it seems and still protect the entire country. With Secretary of Defense, and recommended there has always been controversy over its the addition of the Spartan, we had all the "a measure of defense" for the country. value or lack of that value. Of course, if the ingredients necessary to assemble an effec-ner- no Icon- stive ile threat aPARs (Perrime a raAcquisition have invu ited 1967. Congress approved d the follow- anti-missile shield, there efense had been an frig g amounts for the fiscal year 1968 mill- able troversy, and we would have made a deploy- Radars) to provide long range acquisition tart' budget: ment decision long ago. and tracking of the threat cloud and perform [In mi-l-ons] The first controversy arose around the simple discrimination functions; MSRs (Mis- ABM pr and D ---- ----------------- Q421. 3 question "could a bullet hit a bullet?" This sile Site Radars) to track targets, track and ABM R and D ---------------- 464. 0 phase passed, first when calculations showed guide defensive missiles, and provide limited ABM construction -------------- 84.0 the feasibility of such an intercept and later surveillance and discrimination; long range Sprint June b17, y 1967. Red China detonated cpt most t actualt ICBM etargetseSfl ed inter- outside Spartan missiles m to osphere; attack short the range threat cloud de- - Vandenberg AFB were accomplished by the missiles to attack the enemy warhead within its first hydrogen bomb. installation n of Public ABM pressure for immediate old Nike Zeus system in 1962-63. We had 10 the atmosphere; and the data processing fense mounted. out of 14 successful intercepts. technology required to tie the hardware to- September 18, 1967. Secretary McNam- About the time this "simple" problem was gether into an effective system. ingredients could pro- "thin". announced the decision to deploy a solved, it was realized that the offense would I a stated de that t these against a "iimied ballistic "thin". ABM defense system-the Seri- replace the relatively easy-to-intercept single vile missile defense This st as" needs balana Chineserthre d against the Communist d cwarhead th clouds of e ti e~measues. Examples of these tob-- tion. To explain requires that we examine mid-1970's. re He at that justified would this step o on the the jects were decoys designed to look like war- our offensive capability, for the military plan- ner must consider the offensive and defen- grounds that the Chinese might "miscal- conceal c h to the the waarrhhea ead in and a chaff cloudof gned de radar- to sive capabilities together. An increase or grouno decrease in one invariably permits or requires culate," but failed to admit that the most reflecting objects. Against these more in the other, the sum of which dangerous threat to our security would sophisticated targets it was necessary to dis- a may variation result in a reaction the a potential be a similar miscalculation by the Soviet criminate among them to know which ob- planner must threat start picture jects were incoming warheads. Therefore enenemy s suuch ch the that that the Lure Union es- At this point, Mr. President, I should many objects had to be tracked and observed again simultaneously. If high altitude discrimina- like to document the history of ABM de- tion was unsuccessful, it was necessary for The cornerstone of our strategic policy is velopment by placing in the RECORD a the defense to wait for the targets to reenter to deter deliberate nuclear attack upon the speech given by Dr. Finn Larsen, Prin- the atmosphere and to rely on slow-down or United States, or its allies, by maintaining cipal Deputy Director, Defense Research burn-up of the lighter objects before the Cehiy reliable ability to inflict an n an aggressor, Engineering, Department of Defense, discrimination could be accomplished. ceptable degree ree of of damage upon at any time at Millsaps College, Jackson, Miss., on The old Nike-Zeus system, when con- or combination the courso of a strategic nuclear me January 10, 1968. I ask unanimous con- fronted with these more sophisticated during ng the c after absorbing a sty ng surprise first xsent that this address, entitled "The De- targets, had two major defects. One was that change-even a it used, what are now considered to be old- point t of Nike Sentinel," be printed at fashioned, mechanical radars, which had to We call this our "assured destruction capa- this this poin the RECORD. be mechanically slewed or pointed at each bility," and it will remain such as long as There being no objection, the address target in turn-a matter of seconds. A radar we maintain both the equipment (missiles, was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, for each target was almost a necessity. The bombers, submarines, etc.) and the will to as follows: second defect was that the Zeus, missile use it. This latter, of course, determines the Approved For Release 2004/05/12 : CIA-RDP70B00338R000200170119-7 S 7242 Approved For R CIA-RDP70B00338R000200170119-7 S RECORD - SENATE June 18, 1968 eledfbility of our assured destruction with- Minuteman sites against Soviet attack, which conventional forces to deal wit]ii the :fit ~ tigmll which we become a strategic "paper means that at modest cost we would in fact more likely type of threat to the security be adding even greater effectiveness to our of the free world. In cautioning against this Let us take a look at our strategic posture offensive missile force and avoiding a much danger last fall when he announced the vie-a-vie that of the second most powerful more costly expansion of that force, decision to deploy Sentinel, Secretary Mc- nation on the earth today, the Soviet Union. We cannot be sure why the Red Chinese Namara noted that "The so-called heavy Our farces are immense: 1000 Minuteman wish to develop an ICBM system but the de- ABM shield--at the present state of tech- missiles; 656 missile launchers .carried aboard velopment may be for two reasons: the inter- nology-would in effect be no adequate shield Polaris submarines; and about 600 long-range national prestige that goes with the posses- at all against a Soviet attack, but rather a bombers, approximately 40% of which are sion of a nuclear capability and, more im- strong Inducementfor the Soviets to vastly always on alert. Our alert forces alone carry portantly to provide a basis for threatening increase their own offensive forces. That ... more than 2200 weapons, averaging more her neighbors. Of course, this is only con- would make it necessary for us to respond than one megaton each, and only 400 one- jecture since, although we have some ability in turn-and so the arms race would rush nSe aton-twea of are sufficient to destroy to monitor China's development effort from hopelessly on to no sensible purpose on the population of the Soviet the technological point of view, it is im- either side." Union and one-half. her industry. These forces possible for us to determine the intent be- A second potential danger stems from the are more than those required to absorb a hind their effort. The Communist Chinese possibility of forgetting the purpose for surprise attack by the Soviet Union and still effort has been followed for several years and which Sentinel has been designed: to coun- inflict damage on the Soviet Union such that we waited as long as was prudent before de- ter' an emerging Communist Chinese threat. she is no longer viable in any meaningful ciding to deploy our Sentinel system. The de- It will be quite easy to fall into this trap twentieth-century sense. That ability is called termining factors were the lead times in- with a system such as Sentinel because it second strike" capability. volved. We estimated as accurately as pos- What are, the relative Soviet situations? sible the date the Chinese would have an the two t a flexible radars of ndiltwo types of May are in entlali the same osition. Al- operational ICBM, and then backed off from interceptor missiles--which can he assenf_ though we i4ave a substantial nuclear su- that date the time it would take to have our bled in various combinations and numbers pe'iority over the Soviet Union, by a factor Sentinel system in operation. By placing of provide varying levels of defense against of about foul' to one, they also possess a Sentinel in production early this year, the different related threats. Now that we have 'swond strike' capability for precisely the operational dates will coincide, a system that will work, there will be pres- smAe reason, that we possess one. The result You may wonder why we deploy an ABM sure to expand Sentinel, by adding more is that neither the Soviet Union nor the system to counter the Red Chinese threat and more radars and missiles, into a heavy United States can attack the other without when we discarded it as a rational course of Soviet-oriented ABM system. being destroyed in retaliation. Surely, this action with respect to the Soviet Union. The This we must not do. I remind you of the is the strongest possible motive for each to answer is that only the passage of time will action-reaction phenomenon. It can. only re- avoid a nuclear war. provide us with proof of Chinese intent, and suit in a great deal of expenditure by both What then might be the effect on this military planners must be conservative, and the United States and the Soviet Union with, "balance" of deploying an ABM system by secondly, we can provide an effective defense in the final analysis, no improvement in the either protagonist? At current prices and against any Chinese attack possible in the relative strategic position of either. With today's sate-af-the-art, it costs np- 1970's. There is a third dangerous concept which pr=tnately the same in money and other The United States now possesses and will is of particular interest to me in my position resources for-the offense to re-establish the continue to possess for as far as we can see as Deputy Director for Defense, Research and balance as ifacste the defender to install his into the future an overwhelming strategic Engineering and that is the danger of think- A system, Either can do this by one of superiority over Communist China, and the ing that we can allow a relaxation in re- several means: increase the number of bom- Chinese know that fact. However, it is con- search and development In the broad field of bars and missiles, provide them with gene- ceivable that Chinese leaders at some future defense against ballistic missiles because we tratlon aids. increase the hardness of ICBM till eearmight risk destruction by attempting are about to deploy an operational system. silos, disperse the silos, or improve the mo- against the United States date bility of nuclear forces, to cite but a few. The in order to gain concessions, perhaps in lyofour billliionndollars on ABM Research and net result would be that both protagonists Southeast Asia. If we had no defense, they Development. Our current level of effort runs would spend a great deal of money without might gamble that we would never accept to approximately one-half billion dollars a improving their relative positions. In this the destruction of one of our cities in ex- year in R & D alone. We intend to maintain fashion the Soviet Union and the united change for concessions so far removed geo- this level of effort. We cannot afford the States Influence one anther's strategic plans. graphically. It is this action-reaction phenomenon that Although we know that the Chinese Com- some some sort rt of ABM te imagining BM to tnchnool we logical have l plateau. reached can initiate an arms race. munist leaders understand the devastation ateau. be- Were It technically feasible to develop an which the use of nuclear weapons b China cannot afford a bed a ooan I m nt-I bee could bring ABM will never deveop an Impenetrable Impenetrable ABM system, the foregoing g home to the Chinese mainland, ABM shield regardless of the sophistication Would no longer be true; but the inescapable we have no reason to believe that they will of the attack and the dedication of the at- fact is that no ABU system in the foresee- be any less cautious than the leaders of tacker; or, and vitally important, until we able future will prove 100% effective against other nations with nuclear weapons, hostile can reach an enforceable agreement with the a determined, sophisticated attack. For these action by Red China is not totally incon- rest of the community of nations to outlaw reasons this nation has decided against de- ceivable. We can deploy, for a cost we can nuclear weapons entirely. ploying an ABM system to counter the Soviet well afford (approximately 5 billion dollars), nuclear threat. We have chosen, rather, to an ABM system which, against the Chi- missile I have defense talked about the r tie history of ind the propose a strategic arms-limitation agree- nese threat, will remain effective with fore- decision to deploy and Sentinel. eel. I would like to ment. I am sure you will agree that both seeable improvements at least until the address ress a few d frequently ueliseo o nations-the world, in fact-would benefit 1980's. We have decided to deploy that sYs- detractors, points who feel we should by nht from such agreement, first to limit, then tem. deploy the the the o Sentinel. people w Their reasons are re nut reduce, strategic nuclear forces. I think we Moreover there are other benefits to be - - may be confident that, if agreement is not derived from the deployment of Sentinel. thnummous' for examplespan believe terms possible, both the United States and the By deterring Communist China from nuclear the benefit eithertoovd; others thas of Soviet Union, will maintain their assured blackmail, we hope the betor a be derived; g overhead that the destruction capabilities, weapon proliferation -to discourage nuclear cause pt warheads exploding the y will We have, however, announced a decision to nations among tho present cause provocative casualties- still Russians, the system deploy an ABA system and, at the same time nfit I have on-nuclear natons of Asia. A second bene- is provocative to the Russans, for examplw stated that we cannot protect our cities frorn providing already additional mentioned-the option of One question frequently try asked is: "How rrg additional against v our you know if the system will work, since a Soviet ballistic missile attack. What is the Minuteman sites, even against a Soviet at- there's no way to test it without t violating purpose of our light ABM system called tack, which will improve our assured de- the ban on atmospheric nuclear testing?" Sentinel? The primary objective is that of struction capability. And, lastly, Sentinel The warheads for both the Spartan and achieving protection.. against nuclear caps- is reliable enough to add protection for our Sprint missiles can be tested quite adequate- bility of Communist China. China detonated Population in the unlikely event of an ac- ly underground. It is not necessary that they a nuclear device in October 1964 and has cidental launch of an ICBM by any power. be tested in or above the atmosphere. The since detonated six more. We have evidence The deployment of a system such as remainder of the system will be tested at that they are devoting substantial resources Sentinel can lead to mistaken attitudes Kawjalein Atoll in the Pacific where sites to the development of missile delivery sys- about our military posture. One possible at- are under construction and where we have tems. It is likely they will have an initial titude is an inclination to treat Sentinel as been conducting similar missile and radar ICBM capability in the early 1970's and a a cure for all our military problems. This tests for research and development purposes modest force in being in the mid-1970's. should certainly not be the case. Sentinel for some years. These weapons Will be crude, similar to our provides a defense against a narrow portion The claim has been mode that our own first ICBM's. of a very broad threat spectrum, and then Further, the Chinese-oriented ABM de- only in jt unique set of circumstances. It is Spartan and Sprint warheads detonated o er- p polyment would enable us to add-as a con- a strategic nuclear weapon and, by no head. There are three effects to consider: current benefit-.a further defense of our means, can Sentinel serve as a substitute for Flash, blast and radioactivity. When the war- Approved For Release 2004/05/12 : CIA-RDP70B00338R000200170119-7 Approved For Release 2004/05/12 : CIA7.RDP70B00338R000200170119-7 June is) 1968 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD SENATE mead explodes there will be a bright flash of light. Most of the population underneath would scarcely notice it. If anyone were look- ing in that part of the sky, there is a pos- sibility that the flash could temporarily blind him, but there would be no serious after- effects. Because the high yield bursts take place above the atmosphere, there would be little or no blast. The effect would be like a sonic boom. There would be no significant fallout from the radiation emitted at the time of the ex- plosion. If dozens of defensive bursts oc- curred, they would deposit radioactivity in the atmosphere. There would be no harmful short term effect and the long term effect would be negligible-very similar to that ex- perienced from our test series in 1962. Although the Sprint warhead would ex- plode in atmosphere, it would not cause ground damage 'because of its low yield. Another point that arises from time to time is whether we really expect the So- viets to believe that the Sentinel system is Prot aimed at them, and if they do not believe it, is it not an escalatory move on our part? Frankly this Is difficult to assess. We have no positive assurance that they believe the System Is designed to protect us against Chi- 'nese missiles. We hope that they believe us sand we are counting on their sophisticated 'knowledge and their years of experience in the field. It should be quite obvious to the 13odiets from the technical design of the sys- tem and the deployment plans that will be matte public that the system is Communist Chinese-oriented and not Soviet-oriented. ,A question that may have been raised in your minds is: "If Red China continues to progress at her current rate in strategic weap- onry, how effective will Sentinel be in the 7980's and later?" First, let me say that we Inn have maintained our superiority through that or any time period. Nevertheless, the point is a good one because the technical gap will have narrowed. As the Chinese Com- munists Improve their technology and in- crease their forces in number, we may ex- pect them to have developed their own "sec- ond strike" capability; and the dangerous period of possible Irrationality will have passed. 'The result then may be a U.S.-Chi-. nese Impasse similar to that existing today between ourselves and the Soviet Union. In closing, I would like to make two sig- nliicaritvints. First is that we in the De- par'tment of Defense earnestly believe that an enforceable strategic arms-limitation agree- ment is a desirable first step toward the eventual abolition of nuclear weapons. To -quote Secretary McNamara: "What the world requires In its 22d year of the Atomic Age is not a new race toward armament. -"*hat the world requires in its 22d year of the Atomic Age is a new race toward rea- sonableness." Secondly, the decision to deploy the Com- munist Chinese-oriented Sentinel system Is not another lap in the race toward arma- ment, but rather a protective umbrella which enables us to get on with the race toward reasonableness. Mr. THURMOND. Mr. President, while Doctor Larsen's historical account of the development of the Sentinel system is very good, I am not in agreement with some of his philosophy concerning Soviet and Red Chinese reactions to its instal- lation. An excellent refutation of the philos- ophy that antimissile systems spur the arms race appeared in a feature article of the November 1967 issue of Air Force magazine. The article entitled "The Case for the Defense," was written by Mr. J. S. Butz, technical editor of Air Force. He pointed out that, whether we like it or not, both offensive and defensive -tech- nologies are advancing. Mr. Butz warned that we should not be trapped in an "all- offense" posture and that the path to security required a technologically ad- vanced, balanced offensive-defensive posture. Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent that the article be printed at this point in the RECORD. There being no objection, the article was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: THE CASE FOR THE DEFENSE (By J. S. Butz, Jr.) The proposal by Secretary of Defense Rob- ert S. McNamara that the U.S. produce and deploy a so-called "thin" antiballistic mis- sile (ABM) defense system has provoked a crossfire of pro and anti arguments. Very little of the discussion has succeeded in hit- ting the real target, which is the proper re- lationship between strategic offensive and defensive capabilities in a U.S. strategy that aims at deterring all-out nuclear war under conditions favorable to U.S. interests. No military problem has ever captured the attention of the United States-and the world--as has the problem of defending against nuclear missiles. The Vietnamese War has been a strong diversion, but there is much evidence that more people are con- cerned about the consequences of nuclear war than about any other problem mankind has ever faced. Sadly, the potential threat is far better understood than are the alternatives, either for removing the threat or for living with it. Part of the problem is that nuclear strat- egy discussions tend to become complicated. Partly this is due, in Mr. McNamara's words, to the "psychologically unpleasant" aspect of the problem. People simply don't like to think about the "unthinkable." But mostly the lack of understanding stems from the fact that only bits and pieces of the range of alternatives in nuclear strategy are debated publicly. After reviewing the commentary triggered by the action on a thin defense, one can only conclude that the public is ill-informed on several vital strategic factors. The extent of misinformation is serious. It is almost totally blocking public awareness of what lies ahead for the United States in the next twenty years. For example: It is widely argued that in- stalling any kind of a U.S. ballistic missile defense system-thin or thick-will generate a new arms race. Unfortunately, the opinion has become so widespread that there is a solid scientist/civilian administrator front holding the line against a missile defense on the grounds that it would lead to a new arms race. The adversary is pictured, not as the Soviet Union or Red China, but as a mythical and ill-defined U.S. "military- industrial complex." The truth is that the United States and the Soviet Union have long been heavily engaged in the most rapid, expensive, and potentially most dangerous arms race in re- corded history. Somehow, as the accusations fly over the "illogic" of the ABM, this central fact of our time is ignored. Nothing short of an agreement on total disarmament can stop this race. It will churn on even if defensive missiles are never em- placed, even if the nuclear proliferation treaty is signed tomorrow. Nothing being done today by our government, the Soviet government, or any other government can head off this race. The race centers on offensive weaponry, and it is being forced by the apparently un- stemmable revolution in science and tech- nology that is making every weapon obsolete before it can be deployed, There Is no secret about the pace that technology is forcing. Long-range missiles have been operational S 7243 for only ten years; yet the first generation (Atlas and Titan) has been retired, the sec- ond generation (Minuteman I, II, and Polaris) Is in service, development is well under way on the third generation (Minute- man III and Poseidon), and the fourth gen- eration is well in the planning stage. Officially, the need for most current im- provements in these offensive systems is laid at the door of the Russians with their devel- opment of a missile defense. Somehow the idea has spread that our current offensive missiles in their silos and submarines are going to last a long time if the status quo can be maintained. Two developments in offensive technology negate this idea. Massive changes in pace and direction must soon be made. The existing systems must be replaced almost entirely in the next decade if the U.S. strategic missile forces are to remain safe. The first development is a three-way com- bination of guidance and mapping improve- ments and development of the cluster or multiple warhead. Satellite mapping has made it possible for the first time to locate targets with an accuracy of a few hundred yards. Today's guidance systems almost match this precision, while ten years ago they had an error of more than one mile after a flight of.5,000 miles. With curent accuracy a small nuclear weapon can be used to knock out a missile buried in a hardened silo. When a series of such weapons is clustered in a sin- gle missile, it becomes possible for a rela- tively small offensive force to destroy large numbers of hardened missiles. Since Soviet ICBMs have heavy payloads, they stand to reap big benefits from this technology. The eventual development of this situa- tion comes as no surprise to the technical and military communities. Dr. Ralph Lapp warned in congressional testimony in 1960 that hard-target accuracy was inevitable. By 1962, scientists -predicted in the open litera- ture that such a capability would be here before the end of this decade. The counteraction for improvements in guidance accuracy also have been discussed for years. One either builds harder silos, in- stalls defensive missiles to protect the silos, or moves the offensive missiles out onto mo- bile carriers. The Air Force has asked that the fourth generation of ICBMs be mobile and has explained its requests to DoD and the Congress, Satellite reconnaissance is the second tech- nical development that will force multibil- lion dollar changes in offensive systems. It has been established through high-altitude aircraft experiments, as well as satellite flights, that several instruments operating simultaneously in the visible, infrared, and radio portions of the electromagnetic spec- trum can show variations in the surface radiation patterns of land and sea well enough to reveal a great deal of what is going on underneath. For example, certain underground rivers and tunnels can be spotted, and large bodies, such as schools of fish or submarines, can be "seen" under the water to a depth of more than 200 feet. When this equipment reaches operational use in satellites, and it undoubtedly will in the 1970s, much of the submarine's protec- tion will be gone. The only answer will be to build a new fleet of undersea boats which can operate at greater depths than those of to- day. CASE FOR THE DEFENSE The cause of misunderstanding on nuclear war strategy and the relative merits of of- fensive and defensive weapons can be traced back to one point on which there seems to be universal agreement. This crucial fact is that no foolproof, airtight defense against mis- siles is possible with today's technology or with foreseeable technology. Two basic lines of thought have grown out of this situation. One is that only a per- Approved For Release 2004/05/12 CIA-RDP70B00338R000200170119-7 S 7244 Approved For Release 2004/05/12 : CIA-RDP70B00338R000200170119-7 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -SENATE June 13, '1968 feet defense is worthwhile in nuclear war, because even if only ten percent of the at- tacking warheads reach their targets they will wreak unacceptable devastation. Ac- cording to this theory, it is most logical to put all resources In the offensive forces. US nuclear policy has been built on this idea, and the objective, according to Mr. McNamara, has been to create an "actual assured destruction capability" that is "cre- dible." That Is, the US has built a force of offensive missiles so large there is no doubt it could withstand a first strike by any enemy, or combination of enemies, and still deliver such a blow to the aggressor that "his society is no longer viable in any meaningful, twentieth-century sense." In this "all-offense" concept the only credible deterrence to nuclear aggression lies In the threat of an overwhelming counter- attack. A US ABM is considered a destabiliz- Ing force because it degrades the enemy's offense to some extent and forces him to Install more attack missiles. And in any arms race, to gain a nuclear advantage the offense is In the favorable position because ICBMs are cheaper than an improved defense. Opposition to a ballistic missile defense over the years has been voiced by such scientific policy advisers as Doctors Killian, Kistfakows}c.y, Wiesner, Hornig, York, Brown, and Foster-men who have served in the top science posts in the DoD and White House. The theory has been that a missile defense is of no real Importance against nuclear powers at any stage of development, China included. The fact that the Soviets started installation of a defense system more than a year ago also is of no consequence. This, the anti-anti school holds, Is simply a costly Russian mistake. In this theory the only vi- able deterrent to the use of nuclear weapons is the threat of an overwhelming counter- attack. The ultimate objective of this policy is to work for and maintain a balanced nuclear deterrence between the great nuclear pow- ers while seeking disarmament through negotiation. A second nuclear strategy concept has de- veloped which is in direct opposition to the one espoused by the United States until the decision last month to deploy a thin defense. In this second theory, missile defense has several beneficial roles, and it is a stabilizing rather than a destabilizing force. The top US military authorities, a signi- ficant percentage of the US scientific com- munity, and apparently the key men in the Soviet Union are exponents of this theory. For the past two years, according to Gen. Earle G. Wheeler, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the JCS has recommended unanimously that the US deploy a missile defense that Is stronger than the thin sys- tem now proposed by the Administration but less dense than the so-called "thick" de- fense whose price-tag is $40 billion, spread Over a ten-year period. General Wheeler has been specific in pre- senting the reasons for the JCS view to the Congress. The Joint Chiefs fear that failure of the US to field an ABM will lead to So- viet and Allied belief that we are interested only in the offensive, that Is, first strike, or that our technology is deficient, or that we will not pay to maintain strategic superiority. If the Russians are in sole possession of the ABM, it is considered possible that they may come to believe that their defense system coupled with a nuclear attack on the United States would limit damage to them to an acceptable level. While this acceptable dam- age level is an unknown, If it is ever reached our forces will no longer deter and the first principle of our security policy would be gone. The JCS also believe that some form of ABM is needed to reduce the chances that a new nuclear power, such as China, could destroy several US cities at will with an un- sophisticated missile force. Such a thin ABM also would provide a high probability that any missile launched by accident could be stopped. Finally, the JCS believe that damage to US cities by a nuclear strike could be re- duced in a meaningful way with an ABM system. General Wheeler, last February, stated that despite the mass destruction, "one nation will probably survive in a nu- clear exchange. The thirty, forty, or fifty million American lives that could be saved by Nike-X, therefore, are meaningful, we believe, In every sense of the word." Significant support for the JCS view exists In the US science community. All scientists do not accept the "all-offense" theory. In congressional hearings this year, Dr. Michael M. May, Director of the Lawrence Radiation Laboratory, strongly backed the deployment of an ABM. In an exchange with Sen. Joseph S. Clark (D.-Pa.), Dr. May said that from the standpoint of deterrence it might make sense to put available funds into the of- fense rather than build an ABM. But, he added, "let me take up the question of what if war actually occurs; what If deterrence fails? In that case, even an imperfectly ef- fective ballistic missile [defense] system with shelters will certainly save some tens of mil- lions of lives...." Senator Clark replied, "So what you are saying is, instead of having fifty million Americans killed you have only ten million Americans killed.. , . To me this Is just nonsense." Dr. May disagreed com- pletely, saying, "Not to me." Soviet opposition to the all-offense theory has been repeatedly voiced by Russian mili- tary writers. Maj. Gen. N. Taleneky was typi- cal In writing in 1964, "It Is said that the ... situation cannot be stable where both sides simultaneously strive for deterrence through rocket power and the creation of defensive antimissile systems, I cannot agree.... Pow- erful deterrent fords and an effective anti- missile defense system, when taken together, substantially increase the stability of mutual deterrence." A number of US sources also have reported strong Russian favor for the missile defense concept. Richard B. Foster, Director of the Strategic Studies Center at Stanford Re- search Institute, wrote In 1966 that "the favorable Soviet attitude toward BMD [bal- listic missile defense] was evidenced at the last three Pugwash Conferences. When West- ern spokesmen attempted to persuade the Soviet delegates that there weregood reasons to refrain from developing BMD, the USSR representatives at first failed to understand the arguments. At the third conference they informed the Western delegates that it was too late; the USSR was going ahead with its-BMD program." Professor Freeman J. Dyson, a nuclear weapons expert and student of the Soviets, has said that it is "Wally naive to suppose that any Soviet leader could be persuaded to forgo 'defense' for the sake of preserving 'deterrence,' Attempts from our side to pres- pressure the Soviet government into aband- oning deployment of ABMs would almost certainly backfire." In view of such reports from outside-the government, it is curious that insiders could convince themselves In November 1966 that the Russians could be talked into a ban on missile defenses, long after deployment of their BMD had begun. At any rate the talks failed and the US belatedly Is following the Soviet lead. To sum up, military men generally believe it Is incorrect to put emphasis on casualties when the central objective is to avoid all casualties by deterring war. The aim should be to develop a war-winning capability with a balanced offensive/defensive force ready for combined operations that will minimize our damage while maximizing the enemy's. Pos- session of a combined force, war-winning capability is considered the best deterrence to enemy action. If the US went for the 100 percent offensive force, there is no way - it could limit the damage Inflicted by the enemy except by a first strike. THE FUTURE OF THE ABM Most commentators opposing the ABM have echoed Mr. McNamara and warned that the greatest danger in installing the thin system is that there will be a temptation to seek more protection and to expand It Into a heavy defense. And, according to the Defense Sec- retary, this temptation will lead to a "sense- less spiral upwards of nuclear arms," In which huge sums would be spent, with neither side buying more protection for its people and both running the risk of having more mega- tons of explosive strike its soil. To anyone who questions the logic of the "all-offense" theory, there is a greater con- cern for the future. This worry involves the pace of technology and the major improve- ments in weapon systems that will be forced in the next decade. Defensive systems face innovations just as revolutionary as the ones previously described for offensive missiles. Briefly, the two most important compo- nents in the ABM--the radar and the kill mechanism--apparently are in a period of accelerating improvement with no and in sight. The first major upgrading in radar was the ability to track hundreds of objects rath- er than a single warhead. The early Nike- Zeus radar was mechanically slewed and re- quired seconds to look at each target. It proved many important technical points and knocked down ten out of fourteen ICBM warheads during 1962-1962 tests, but it was at a serious disadvantage aga.tnAt mass at- tacks with decoys supporting the warheads. This limitation was relieved with the Nlke-X phased-array radar, which can sweep the en- tire sky with Its electronically steered beams in microseconds. Future developments are aimed at higher frequency devices which will reduce the radar blackout time following the detonation of large nuclear weapons in the upper atmosphere. Another objective is to improve multispectral methods of sorting warheads from decoys. Nuclear weapon development Is In its most revolutionary period. For several years both the US and USSR have been working on pure fusion weapons, often called neutron or N-bombs. S. T. Cohen, of the RAND Corp.. last June wrote of the fact that Vkese weap- ons use nuclear processes which emit no ra- dioactivity and shower forth neutrons of a "unique nature" with sufficiently high energy to permit "new domains of utilization." One of the practical results of this new tech- nology is that designers can Improve the capacity of nuclear weapons to stop ICBM warheads. Another effect of the new technol- ogy, according to Mr. Cohen, is that the cost of nuclear weapons will drop sharply. Very large warheads also are being Investi- gated for the ABM system because it was found that the original US scaling theory was Inaccurate and that very large weapons probably produce 1,000 times more neutrons than was estimated a few years ago. As the effectiveness of the defensive warheads is in- creased, a system can approach the point where each defense weapon can take out more than one ICBM warhead. One of the stickiest technical facts that must be faced in the next 10 years is that space operations can materially increase the effectiveness of an ABM system. The opti- mum vantage point for observing and track- ing an ICBM strike is out in space where the launch can be seen and the entire thirty- minute flight followed. Observing from space is a substantial improvement over the cur- rent system of sitting in the target area and picking up the warheads In their terminal dives. Present-day moving target indicators and other tracking equipment could handle the observation-from-space task admirably, and undoubtedly improvements can be made. Approved For Release 2004/05/12 : CIA-RDP70B00338R000200170119-7 Approved For Release 2004/05/12: CIA-RDP70B00338R000200170119-7 June 13, 1968 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE 9 Space operations offer the additional pos- sibility of attacking an ICBM strike along Its entire route, during the boost and midcourse phases as well as the terminal. Defensive warheads positioned in space could be brought down on command to form a "mine- field" before the attacker. Many other schemes are possible. Without doubt, talk of a spaceborne com- ponent of the ABM system will bring imme- diate and loud objections from anyone who embraces the "all-offensive" theory or from anyone who is concerned about an expansion of the thin defense and fears the cost of space operations. Still, there is no escaping the fact that rapid, constant change, in military sys- tems as well as in everything else, is a part of our life. Technology is forcing it. One of the great expectations is that the technical revolution will lead to stronger de- fenses. Somewhere in the unforeseeable fu- ture, a decade or so ahead, if man is persist- ent enough, he should be able to build a de- fense that will all but neutralize the nuclear offense. Effectively, man has two roads for seeking a way out of the nuclear dilemma. The first is with science and technology-the areas that started the trouble in the first place. The second is through negotiations to see if national governments can talk themselves out of their 'aficient antagonisms and cur- rent fears. Both of these efforts are vital to building a world safe from nuclear catastro- phe. Perhaps neither could ever do the job alone. It is difficult to see how peace would be served for the US and USSR to seek a status quo and wait for China, and possibly other nations, to creep ahead with the development of an "assured-destruction capability" with the power to annihilate all whom they con- sider to be an enemy. In any event, it fs Impossible to see what purpose is served by leaving the impression that the US is helping to precipitate an arms race by belatedly okaying a thin ABM system while the Soviets are already beyond that stage and at work on a heavy model. Mr. McNamara, In his announcement, fueled critics of the military to overflowing by leav- ing the impression that he was being pushed Into approving the thin system and would never alter his opposition to a further ex- pansion of the defenses. At this stage in the technical revolution It would seem mandatory for the Secretary of Defense to make it clear that we are far from the end of the line in strategic arms, and that the fifth and sixth generations of long-range missiles and a heavier defense may be necessary in the next decade. No one would expect the Secretary to present a long shopping list of exotic new space and weapon systems. But he should at least create a cli- mate in which all new systems are not viewed as part of a vast military-Industrial plot. Such a climate Is necessary to public accept- ance of the thin ABM for what it is, a neces- sary step In the twenty-year-old US-USSR arms race that cannot be terminated without a near-miracle in negotiation or a technical breakthrough comparable to the first atomic weapon. Mr. THURMOND. Mr. President, re- cently the Senate Preparedness Investi- gating Subcommittee held hearings on offensive and defensive strategic weapons and weapon delivery systems. The re- sults of these hearings are not yet avail- able, but I can assure Senators that the need for antimissile defense Was care- fully explored. I should hope that any Senator who might be inclined to delay the deployment of the Sentinel system would, before he votes on the defense appropriation, contact the Senate Pre- pVedness Subcommittee and obtain a copy of the hearings showing the hazards that such a delay would involve, Mr. President, in concluding my com- ments in defense of the Sentinel system, I should like to summarize. I have pointed out the grave consequences of any delay in the deployment of the Sen- tinel system. I have reviewed the history and the threat against which the ABM defends. I have presented the case for this defense and have cited the Prepared- ness Investigating Subcomittee hearings on strategic offensive and defensive weapons systems as the authority for continuing with the Sentinel deployment. I urge the Senators to familiarize them- selves with this entire problem before taking any precipitate action in reduc- ing defense appropriations when the money bill comes before the Senate. It has been estimated that if an all- out war should occur, an antiballistic missile system could save from 80 mil- lion to 100 million lives. Taking into consideration the tremendous jeopardy that could result to our Nation because of the loss of millions of lives as well as the loss of hundreds of millions of dollars worth of property, it would seem the part of prudence not to delay in going forward with an antiballistic mis- sile system. Military experts believe we should go forward without delay. In fact, they further advise that we go fur- ther with the full system, not merely with a thin system, with which the De- partment of Defense is now proceeding. However, the thin system will lay the base to proceed later with a complete system that would be a defense against the missiles of the Soviet Union. PERSONAL PRIVILEGE Mr. DODD. Mr. President, I do not like to detain' the staff or other Senators, but I believe this matter is so important that I must do so for a little while tonight. This morning, Drew Pearson and Jack Anderson made their latest at- tack against me, and it appeared in many of the morning newspapers across the country. Pearson's vendetta against me began when I first entered the House of Rep- resentatives approximately 14 years ago, and this morning's column is the 123d which he has written condemning me. He has accused me of almost every imaginable impropriety and wrong and now he has gone even further by say- ing that even in the area in which I have fought the hardest, and to which I have dedicated much of my senator- ial career, I am not honest and, in fact, have been working against the public interest. Pearson's lying attacks upon me no longer hurt me. I believe I am beyond that point. They no longer anger me. But the charge of this morning appalled me and amazed me, because it was so incredible, so totally inaccurate, so blatantly false. While all of his charges against me have been untrue, the falsity of many of them has been difficult for me to prove, because, unfortunately, there has not al- ways been sufficient evidence and docu- mentary proof of the truth. With respect to this morning's charges, however, I am in possession of overwhelming proof that Pearson is what all knowledgeable Amer- S 7245 icans know him to be--an unmitigated and scandalous liar. Today, Pearson and Anderson and their lying, thieving jackals charge that I, while pretending to vigorously work toward curbing violence among the young people of our country, have ac- tually been working in the opposite di- rection-specifically, by suppressing a Senate Juvenile Delinquency Subcom- mittee study of the impact of television crime and violence on our young people. I quote what he wrote: These (television) studies, written more than six years ago, were suppressed, ironi- cally, by the same Senator Tom Dodd (D-Conn.) who introduced the gun control bill to curb violence. He goes on to quote from a series of memorandums written by members of the staff to me about the substance of these studies, and claims that all of these, as well as the study itself, were suppressed. Pearson claims that my motive was my desire not to embarrass the powerful television networks. Mr. President, all these charges are completely false and an incredible dis- tortion of history. Here is the real truth and the real proof, Fortunately, I have it. As chairman of the Subcommittee on Juvenile Delinquency, I have been con- cerned with violence since 1961. For the first 3 years, I dedicated myself to the problem of violence on television and its potential effect on the public and on young people. From 1963 on, I have been interested In stronger gun control legislation. Between 1961 and 1963 I did con- duct-and the record will establish that I did-an intensive investigation of crime and violence on television. During this period we held many days of hearings. The hearing record is here. It Is voluminous. Many, many witnesses appeared. The foremost experts in psy- chiatry and criminology and in the tele- vision industry. In all, we heard from 56 witnesses, and on my desk are the records, which I hope every Member of the Senate will read. They were printed and released to the public and to the press in the usual way. Finally, on October 27, 1964, with the ap- proval of the majority of the subcom- mittee, I made a public and thorough and comprehensive report on crime and vio- lence on television and its impact on our young people. We released 10,000 copies of that re- port. It was released to the public..I do not know how-it could have been done better. That this unforgivable liar can claim that I suppressed this investigation, in the face of these facts and documentary proof, is utterly beyond my comprehen- sion. I try to be a gentleman. I want to be. But so many lies have been told about. me, and so many people have believed them, that my patience is broken. But Pearson himself is beyond compre- hension in the depths to which he will sink and the outrageous lengths to which he will go to assassinate the characters of those whom he hates. He hates me. I do not hate him. I am sorry for him; but I feel it Is incumbent upon me, for my- Approved For Release 2004105/12 : CIA-RDP70B00338R000200170119-7 S 7246 Approved For Release 2004/05/12 : CIA-RDP70B00338R000200170119-7 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE June 13, 1968 self, for my family, and for aiy friends that the record be written straight, The crowning proof of this morning's lies by Pearson and Anderson Is Drew Pearson himself in an article which he wrote just 13 days after the release of this subcommittee report. In that column of November 9, 1964, he praised me for releasing this report and 'uncovering the truth about the violent 'ature of the television network pro- grams. I would think that it would behoove Irresponsible and lying columnists such : Anderson and Pearson to at least re- member what they have written and said in the past. But when a person starts to lie, he gets in trouble because he can- not remember the lies he told. And I have always felt that it was in- evitable that Pearson and Anderson who lie to the degree that they do, would sooner or later get caught up in their lies. I want to briefly quote from this 1964 Pearson column: The current report by Senator Tom Dodd (D-Conn.) on juvenile delinquency shows tact some of the networks are serving just as brazen a crime diet as ever. And since the people of California have set a precedent that Individual Americans cannot see entertain- eypay for, it might be well for the rest of ttte country to diagnose carefully what it Is gettng free. 'The Senate Juvenile Delinquency Comrnit- t dug into the secret files of the American Broadcasting Company to get its inter-office memos, some of them pertaining to "The Un- toachables," This is a show originally watched over a five-year period by 5,500,000 children a week, (It is no longer on the ABC network.) " 'Ironically, these are some of the very memos which Pearson claims in this ni rning's column were suppressed by me. Let, me quote from another Pearson column, which appeared on August 19, 1964. or various reasons, it looks as if televi- sion Is going to be up against the congres- stonal gun this year. Sharpshooter No, 1 is Ben, Tom Dodd (D- Conn,), who blames television for our scan- dalous juvenile delinquency increase. He is supported by Sen. Ken Keating (R-N.'!t.). In tough language they have warned the networks that there's been absolutely no change in the diet of crime and sex being dished out to the public--especially by NBC and ABC. This highly important television study, which Pearson, Anderson, and their jackals and thieves would have the American public believe I suppressed, re- sulted in many significant findings. I want to briefly review some of the more iniportant ones for the RECORD. First. Normal people who view violence on film exhibit twice as much violence thereafter as persons not exposed to such presentation. This was proven by scien- tific experimentation. Second. Television programs which feature excessive violence tend to rein- force overly aggressive attitudes and drives in juvenile viewers where such at- titudes and drives already exist. Third. Children can be taught to per- form aggressive acts by being exposed to such acts on television. Fourth. Continuous exposure of the young to programs containing violence, crime, and brutality tends to produce a cumulative effect which can build up ag- gressive tendencies and the viewers' ac- ceptance of excessive violence as the normal way of life. Fifth. Filmed violence can serve as the motivation for the release of hostility and aggressive behavior in some Individ- uals already under stress for other rea- sons. In this report I was highly critical of the television industry and I warned the industry that it had to cut the amount of violence and crime on its programs or face congressional intervention. I have often repeated this criticism, and as recently as last Tuesday, on the floor of the Senate, I described the re- sults of this important study. Nothing means more to me, there is nothing closer to my heart, nothing to which I have dedicated more time than my campaign, and, persistent efforts to investigate the causes of violence in our society, particularly among our young people. This was the reason for my ef- forts to see that we have strict gun con- trol legislation enacted. This was the reason for the television study. It brought me a lot of trouble. But that never bothered me. However, Pearson lied again this morning when he challenged my sincer- ity in this regard and impugned my In- tegrity with respect to this most impor- tant aspect of my career in the Senate. But this is just another example of the countless lies, misrepresentations, and distortions made by this man and his associates against me. I shall have more to say about the subject. It may take a few days, but I am preparing to do it. Drew Pearson is a liar. He is a mon- ster. Someday the American people will recognize it. Those associated with him are thieves, liars, and monsters. Some- day the American people will recognize it. His business is lying. He is a devil. It appalled me that he was honored as a Big Brother; a molester of children who had the records of his arrest de- stroyed. What is his strange power in this Government? I said on another occasion he Is the Rasputin of our society, and he is. I do not know what his influence is. I know he had the affrontery to call me and ask me to vote against Mr. Bress as U.S. attorney for the District of Co- lumbia. One of my colleagues brought the memorandum to me and asked me not to say who gave it to him. I told him I must know and he said, "It is Pearson." I have been learning more about Pearson and Anderson and their lying and thieving associates than perhaps any other man in this body. I am going to put it in the RECORD. They should be put away. They prey on the frailties of human nature, and they get evil things done. Mr. President, this Is not the last thing I am going to have to say on this subject. I am, as I said, at the breaking point in my patience and I am going to tell all I know about them. It is going to shock the Senate, it Is going to shock this coun- try, and it is going to shock the world, I have some pretty good evidence. He has caused more men to destroy themselves than perhaps any other man in my time. He is not going to cause me to do so. He will ruin you, Mr, President (Mr. LONG of Louisiana in the chair), and every Member of the Senate if you do not serve his purpose. He Is the Devil's own slave. He does not know honor. He does not know truth. He is a monster and his jackals are just as bad. Mr. President, I am sorry for this delay. I ask unanimous consent to have printed in theRECORD two articles writ- ten by Drew Pearson. There being no objection, the articles were ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: [Nov. 9, 19641 WASHINGTON MERRY-Go-ROUND (By Drew Pearson) WASHINGTON.-Now that California has elected a song-and-dance man to the Senate and simultaneously killed the right of its people to see pay-as-you-go television, it should be up to the TV networks to improve the quality of their programs. However, the current report by Sen. Tom Dodd (D-Conn.) on juvenile delinquency shows that some of the networks are serving just as brazen a crime diet as ever, And since the people of California have set a precedent that individual Americans cannot see enter- tainment they pay for, it might be well for the rest of the country to diagnose carefully what it is getting free. The Senate Juvenile Delinquency Commit- tee dug into the secret files of the American Broadcasting Company to get its inter-office memos, some of them pertaining to "The Untouchables." This is a show originally watched over a five-year period by 5,500,000 children a week. [It is no longer on the ABC network.] Here is one ABC inter-office memo describ- ing the blood-and-guts proposed for these viewers: "Opens right up ... a running gunfight between two can of mobsters who crash, then continue the fight in the streets. Three killed. Six Injured. Three killed are innocent by- standers , , , "There's a good action scene where the mail truck Is held up and the driver killed. "Colbeck suspicions it was Courtney and beats it out of Joe's henchman. Courtney is trapped in an alley and beaten unconscious and tossed in the river... "Colbeck pressures a police lieutenant who owes him a favor to pick up (Courtney's) gal and deliver her to a spot on the bridge where Colbeck's men will shoot her dead," On one occasion, ABC program people ad- vised ABC president Tom Moore that there Is a tendency of recent episodes to become "talky" and as a result much of the action and suspense is lost. Moore then wrote pro- ducer Quinn Martin: "I hope you will give careful attention to maintaining this action and suspense in fu- ture episodes. As you know, there has been a softening of the ratings, which may or may not be the result of this talkiness, but cer- tainly we should watch it carefully" Martin is known In the trade as it "blood- and-guts" producer. Regarding another show, "A Killer Called Paddy-O," Martin wrote this memo marked "personal and con- fidential,": "I wish we could come up with a different device than running a man down with a car, as we have done this now in three different shows. "I like the Idea of sadism, but I hope-we can come up with another approach for it." Approved For Release 2004/05/12 : CIA-RDP70B00338R000200170119-7